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FREE ESSAY ON OTHELLO

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Conflict in "Othello"
A brief analysis of the conflict between Desdemona and Othello in the play "Othello" by William Shakespeare. -- 908 words;

Othello's Mistake
A brief insight into the mistake Othello made in the play "Othello"' by William Shakespeare. -- 747 words;

"Othello"
This paper discusses the character of Othello in Shakespeare's "Othello". -- 1,790 words;

Othello As A Tragic Hero
Using the theories of Aristotle regarding tragedy, this paper discusses the character of Othello in Shakespeare's "Othello" as a tragic hero. -- 1,900 words;

Chaos Versus Order: Orson Welles' "Othello"
An examination of the use of lighting, camera angles and props to symbolize the changing characters of Othello and Iago in Orson Welles' film version of William Shakespeare's "Othello". -- 2,976 words; MLA

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OTHELLO

Othello, written by William Shakespeare is the story of Othello, the protagonist and
tragic hero of the play. A Moor commanding the armies of Venice, he is a celebrated
general and heroic figure whose free and open nature will enable Iago to twist his love
for his wife Desdemona into a powerful jealousy. Iago is Othello's ensign, and
Shakespeare's greatest villain. His public face of bravery and honesty conceals a Satanic
delight in manipulation and destruction. Passed over for a promotion by his commander, he
vows to destroy the Moor. 
If Iago is an artist of evil, then this scene is the finest canvas he paints. This is the
crucial moment in the play, the scene where he, , deceives Othello and induces him to
fall. He does so by expanding on the tactics used in prior scenes. Once the seed of doubt
is planted in the Moor's mind with a quick Ha! I like not that (III.iii.35) (when they
come upon Desdemona and Cassio) and a few probing questions about the ex-lieutenant's
relationship to Othello's wife, Iago retreats into the guise he has adopted. He becomes
honest Iago, again, as in the brawl in Act II, scene ii--the reluctant truth-teller who
must have unpleasant news dragged from him by a determined Othello.
The honesty suggested by his reluctance to speak is reinforced by the moralizing tone
that he takes with his commander. Iago actually lectures Othello, warning him against
jealousy (the green-eyed monster) and insisting that he will not speak slander: he that
filches from me my good name / Robs of that which not enriches him / And makes me poor
indeed (III.iii.158-61). At the same time, he plays upon the insecurities of the honest,
noble African in sophisticated, decadent Venice by lecturing Othello on how Venetian
women are deceitful and treacherous by nature. The overall effect is to pour verbal
poison in his master's ear--not by lying, but by flavoring truth with innuendo.
Othello will later declare that he is not easily jealous, and that assessment of his
character seems to be shared by most of the figures around him in the play. The critical
response is mixed--some critics insist that his claims to be innocent of jealousy are
merely self-justifying, and certainly he slips easily into assuming his wife to be
unfaithful. Other critics make the distinction between an inner, self-created jealousy,
which he seems to lack, and a deep insecurity and trusting nature, as Iago puts it, which
allow a clever manipulator to plant seeds of doubt. Behind his insecurity lies a man
uneasy with his place in Venetian society: he may have married a white woman, a daughter
of a Senator, but can he keep her?
The seizure of the handkerchief is a great coup for Iago in his quest to destroy Othello,
and he is aided by his wife, who apparently has no scruples about betraying her mistress
in small matters. Shakespeare will eventually transform Emilia into a voice of moral
outrage, and by the final scene the audience will applaud her role in Iago's destruction,
but for now it is worth noticing that she is only Iago's accomplice. It will take a great
shock to inspire outrage against him--a shock which comes too late.
The scene ends with Iago triumphant, named as lieutenant (the rank to which he aspired
from the beginning) to a man bent on destruction, and ready to join in that destruction
himself--because in killing Cassio and Desdemona, Othello is killing himself. And that,
of course, has been Iago's goal from the beginning.
Othello's wild, violent behavior in front of Lodovico, in which he strikes his wife and
abuses her for no apparent reason, demonstrate the perversion of order that Iago has
brought about. There is no one to halt Othello's lawlessness, because he himself is the
law in Cyprus.
Othello's accusations and refusal to accept Desdemona's denials are brutal and unfair,
but his language recovers some of the nobility that it had lost in previous scenes.
Iago-like curses are replaced by sorrowful laments for what has been lost, and the
audience is reminded the heroism and dignity that Othello possessed at the beginning of
the play. His cry O, thou weed, / Who art so lovely fair, and smell'st so sweet, / That
the sense aches at thee--would thou hadst ne'er / been born! (IV.ii.69-72) is a powerful
expression of the love that he still holds for his wife, which has been ruined for ever
by Iago's poisons. Othello is wrong, terribly wrong, but Shakespeare demands that we
sympathize with his error.
Othello's words as he prepares to murder Desdemona reveal the extent to which he has
allowed Iago's logic to dominate his own thinking. His fury has abated, but he is left
with a sense of being an instrument of divine justice. Desdemona must die, he insists,
because otherwise she might betray other men. Othello's self-delusion is so strong that
he believes himself to be merciful--he will not scar her body, he says, and he will allow
her to pray, because I would not kill thy soul (V.ii.34). Some sense of the enormity of
his crime impinges on his delusion when he realizes that when I have plucked thy rose / I
cannot give it vital growth again, (V.ii.13-14)--but not enough to stay his hand.
The actual murder is one of the most painful scenes in all of Shakespeare, because of
Desdemona's manifest innocence, beauty, and purity, and because she continues to love
Othello to the grave and even beyond, returning to life only to gasp out an exoneration
for her husband. He rejects her last gift, but his illumination arrives quickly
thereafter, and the audience's anger at the Moor dissipates as he is completely undone by
the realization of his terrible error. There is no need to punish him, really--his
horrible self-awareness (O Desdemona! Desdemona! dead!) is punishment enough. There is
much critical disagreement over whether Othello's final speech rehabilitates him to the
nobility that marked him when the play began. Certainly, his speech is not all that one
might wish for- -his claim to be one not easily jealous (V.ii.354) is open to question,
and when he says that he loved not wisely, but too well, (V.ii.353) the audience can only
groan at his lack of understanding. But Othello passes judgment on himself with the
courage we would expect in a military hero and loyal general, and he kills himself just
as he once killed the enemies of Venice. Shakespeare allows him a final word, too, after
this speech, and Othello, dying, reaches for Desdemona, reminding the audience of what a
great love has been destroyed.
As for the destroyer, he too comes undone in this scene. His parting words--what you
know, you know--deny us the explanation that we crave, but the audience can take some
satisfaction in watching Emilia, roused from cynicism to righteous vengeance, bring down
her husband as surely as he brought down his victims. Iago's fury at Emilia might just as
well be a fury for himself, who spent the entire play manipulating Brabantio, Roderigo,
Cassio, Othello, and Desdemona, and in the end is undone by the person he least
expected--his wife.
All this talk of time should make us remember another aspect of this tragedy: prophecy.
If tragedy happens when past is brought into present, then it is prefigured when future
is brought into present. This has been the role of Tiresias in this play, and his
replacement here by the messenger, another old man who has come with news from afar, has
significance only in terms of this temporal theme that we have already established. The
prophet and the messenger would seem to be in the same temporal region, for both arrive
after the events and before the tragedy, but they arrive with a crucial difference. The
messenger comes after the prophet, but from where he comes can see neither past nor
future. He can only naively render both into the moment, and his language is thus not
marked with the reluctance and iteration of Tiresias. Rather, he speaks freely, without
the prophet's fatal awareness of how the difficulties of language are at once
supplemental and central to the tragedies of time. The shepherd seems to sense this, but
his resolve is broken. Where earlier Oedipus threatened punishment, here the guards come
on-stage and begin to torture the shepherd. The way power and force here shatter the
complex network of language and time 

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