Tuesday, February 5, 2019
Othelloââ¬â¢s Themeland :: Othello essays
Othellos Themeland Built on a bountiful base of multiple themes, Othello is peerless of William Shakespeares most popular tragedies. lets sift through the themes and try to rank them in significance. In the Introduction to The Folger Library General Readers Shakespeare, Louis B. Wright and Virginia A. LaMar consider the arch-villainy of the past to be the most potent theme Othello avoids all irrelevancies and the action moves swiftly from the first scene to the denouement. We neer get lost in a multiplicity of incidents or a multitude of characters. Our attention remains refer on the arch villainy of Iago and his plot to plant in Othellos mind a corroding belief in his wifes faithlessness. (viii) A. C. Bradley, in his book of literary criticism, Shakespearean Tragedy, describes the theme of knowledgeable green-eyed monster in Othello But jealousy, and especially sexual jealousy, brings with it a sense of ignominy and humiliation. For this reason it is generally hidden i f we perceive it we ourselves are ashamed and reverse our eyes away and when it is not hidden it commonly stirs contempt as well as pity. Nor is this all. Such jealousy as Othellos converts human beings nature into chaos, and liberates the beast in man and it does this in relation to one of the most intense and also the most ideal of human feelings. (169) Helen Gardner in Othello A Tragedy of Beauty and Fortune agrees with Bradley, saying that its subject is sexual jealousy, loss of faith in a form which involves the whole character at the profound point where body meets essence (144). Of course, jealousy of a non-sexual nature torments the antagonist, the ancient, to the point that he ruins those around him and himself. Francis Ferguson in Two Worldviews recollect Each Other describes On the contrary, in the world of his philosophy and his imagination, where his spirit lives, there is no cure for passion. He is, behind his mask, as alert as a cage of those cruel and lustful monkeys that he mentions so often. It has been pointed out that he has no intelligible plan for destroying Othello, and he never asks himself what good it will do him to ruin so many people. It is full for him that he hates the Moor. . . .(133) Act 1 Scene 1 opens with an expression of jealousy and hatred Roderigo is upbraiding Iago because of the elopement of the object of his affections Desdemona -- with the Moor Thou toldst me thou didst defecate him in thy hate.
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