Othello Character Analysis and General Notes
Othello Character Analysis and General Notes
Othello Character Analysis and General Notes
Othello
Character
o Tragic hero Flaw - Insecurity (Jealous)
- Trust?
o Controversial
- Becomes racial stereotype
- Is Othello responsible for tragedy or Iago?
o Othello blames Iago perplexed in the extreme
o Conflict between dualities;
Black and white
Inferior and superior
Arrogant and self-doubt
General and husband
Public and private
Hero (Venetian) and villain (Turk)
Trusting and suspicious
Becomes Elizabethan racial Stereotype:
Violent, sex-obsessed, primitive
Loses control (epileptic fit) physically and emotionally
Animalistic
o
Redeem himself last speech sacrifices self
Language
Reflects personality
Noble - most [potent grave on reverend signors
Primitive O! O! O!
He thinks he is inarticulate rude am I in my speech
Won Desdemona through speech exotic = cannibals, Anthropophagi
Mythical references Prometheus Compares and sees himself as mythical figure.
3rd person grand majestic figure distant - Othellos occupation gone
Language deteriorates as his morality and personality des e.g. repetition of handkerchief
and strumpet
Language reflects Iagos language
Repetition
Dual meanings
Asides
Sexual innuendos hot, hot and moist
Animals goats and monkeys
Sees himself as force of nature Pontic Sea - III.3
Iago
Character
o Expert manipulation Brabantio, Roderigo, Cassio, Emilia, Desdemona, Othello and Bianca
Audience.
o Manipulates audience racial stereotype I.1 feel like accomplice
o Dramatic irony caused by Iago
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
Language
Persuades
Othello
Changes language according to who he speaks to e.g. crude with Roderigo I.2 line 53
Sexual innuendos
Animal imagery old black ram tupping your white ewe
Repetition
Pauses
Hints
Questions
Asides duality public/private
Play on words honest lie - on Desdemona/ to Othello
Soliloquy addresses audience
Uses others language Brabantio I.1 My house is not a grange (farm)- Inspires Iagos
animal imagery.
Metaphor garden reap what you saw I.3
Poinsoner - Poison his delight
I am not what I am irony and layers of reading
Desdemona
Character
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
Start strong, sexy, independent woman defies father asks Duke to accompany Othello
End weak, passive, victim forgives Othello
Influenced by plot believable inconsistency
Nave Misunderstands Othello
Colour blind
Becomes very innocent do women really cheat in their husbands
Lodovico comment ambiguous, innocent? Sexual desire? (undressing at the time)
Language
Cassio Character
o
o
o
o
o
o
Contrast Othello
Natural suitor for Desdemona white, respected, charming
Relationship with Bianca socially acceptable in Shakespeares time modern audience
judges him more harshly
Popular with women
Abuses Bianca fulfills Emilias idea men devour women
Realizes power or reputation reputation, reputation, reputation
Language
Compliments
Polite about Desdemona
Laughs at Desdemona
Dramatic irony honest Iago
Contrast to Iagos straight forward
Emilia Character
o
o
o
o
o
o
o
Practical, realistic
Loyal to Desdemona dies for Desdemonas reputation and the truth
Worldly, wise women being unfaithful for the world
Obedient wife steals handkerchief, asks permission to speak
Innocent victim
Handkerchief contradiction reluctant to give it without knowing the plan
Feminist character believes in equality
Language
Metaphor men= stomach, women=food
Plays with words by this heavenly light
Similarities to Iagos but uses to reveal honest opinion Unlike Iago, uses it to
conceal.
Bianca
Character o
o
o
o
o
Language
Little voice= little power
Pleading
Angry/jealous not taken seriously
Themes
Appearance/reality
Iago appears to be honest, honest Iago Dramatic Irony Audience knows he isnt
Iago appears to be faithful to Othello then refers to him as lusty moor and the devil
Othellos inability to accept reality Desdemona chose him but fails to accept she loves
him She did deceive her father marrying you
Othello appears to be racial stereotype but in fact isnt far more fair than black
Black on the outside, white on the inside
Although Bianca is perceived as a whore she has a heart of gold genuinely loves
Cassio
Power
Iago
Most powerful
Manipulates all other characters
Uses language to gain his power
Uses his power to create chaos
Plague him with flies I.1
Uses his reputation as Honest Iago to gain his power
Destroys others reputation for his own gain (Cassios, Othellos and Desdemonas)
From this time forth I never will speak a word Iago maintains his power by denying
Othello and the others any closure and continue manipulating them through the end.
Jealousy
Othello becomes obsessive and compulsive due to Iagos manipulation which makes his
jealousy more potent - Is Othello naturally jealous?
Iago is a jealous character Cassio for his job, Othello for position and status,
Desdemona for Othellos love (Queer reading)
Othello - Must you speak of one that loved not wisely but woo well Denies jealousy,
yet jealousy caused him to kill Desdemona.
Othello - That we can call these delicate creatures ours/ but not their appetites!
Jealous of Cassio sleeping with Desdemona when they may not have consummated
their own Marriage.
Tis a monster/ begot upon itself, born on itself Jealousy is an uncontrollable monster
that breeds on itself.
They are not ever jealous for the cause/ but the jealous for theyre jealous. Jealous
people often have no reason for their jealousy. Desdemona is oblivious o Othellos
jealousy.
Justice and Judgment Men get justice for their actions Cassio, Roderigo, Iago and Othello Women do not
receive justice, they are killed unjustly Emilia and Desdemona
Misjudgment causes chaos - Othellos misjudgment of Iago
Taking justice into their own hands causes corruption and evil e.g. How Iago decides
to punish Othello and Othello to punish Desdemona and Cassio.
Parallels
Other Notes
Conflict dualities and opposites
Black white
Outsider insider
Faith jealousy
Soldier Husband
Public private
Men - women
Love hatred
Words actions
Justice injustice
Good evil
Honest dishonest
Powerful powerless
Virgin - prostitute
Dramatic Structure
Repetition e.g
oIago manipulates confusion in darkness in I.1 and V.1
oIago repeats his manipulation of Roderigo with all characters building up to Othello
oRepetition f language is used for dramatic effect persuasion, disbelief or extreme
emotion honest, think, lies, The handkerchief and My husband
oMen abusing women Iago abuses all three, Cassio abuses Bianca, and the clown
abuses Desdemona.
oOthello and Desdemona echo each other about not betraying the other for all the world
oIago also kills his innocent wife
Shakespeares use of time Double time scale
Short time creates dramatic tension
Desdemona and Othellos wedding night same day they get to Cyprus
Desdemona pleads for Cassios job back the next day and Iago suggests the affair.
AS Othello killing Desdemona has to happen fairly quickly it seems only a matter of days
between arriving in Cyprus and the tragedy.
Emilia comments that Iago asked her to steal the handkerchief a hundred times
Bianca complains to Cassio What keep a week away?
Othello is convinced Desdemona and Cassio committed the act a thousand times
Setting Venice
More of a democracy (compared to England)
Cyprus
Island isolation, separate
Conflict war- fighting over it
Politically unstable history
Chaos
Represents Othello he is under attack
Storm turmoil, violence, chaos, change, confusion
Othello and Desdemona removed form familiarity and safety