Master Harold And The Boys Essay

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The plays “Master Harold”... and the boys by Athol Fugard and Othello by William Shakespeare were written centuries apart, but both explore society’s complex perspective on race. In the 1600’s and the 1950’s—the respective time time periods of Othello and “Master Harold”... and the boys—having dark skin meant that one was considered an outsider, and someone typically below people with lighter skin; the protagonists of Shakespeare and Fugard’s works contrast this stereotype. Othello is a highly regarded general in the Venetian army, but his appearance quickly leads to his mutation and downfall as a murderer. On a less drastic scale, Sam Semala is a wise and caring servant in young Hally’s parents’ tea shop; his nature is twisted when Hally chooses …show more content…

After Hally “spits in [Sam’s] face,” Sam proclaims that he does not “want to help! [he wants] to hurt him” (Fugard, 57). After trying to prevent Hally from speaking ill of his father, and trying to get Hally to see the beauty in danceㅡused by Fugard to symbolize lifeㅡand progress despite his own likely terrible treatment, Sam has allowed the stereotypes in South Africa to infect him in the same way that Othello allows them to do so. When Othello is convinced by Iago of his inadequacies when compared to Desdemona’s supposed lover, Cassio, Othello so easily believes that Desdemona could cheat on him with Cassio because he is everything that Othello is not, and everything that Desdemona is. Cassio is “[o]f her own clime, complexion, and degree,” and their match would be what “nature tends” (Shakespeare, 3.3.70, 71). Shakespeare allows Othello to believe these lies so easily to show that Othello is sensitive to racial stereotypes, and thus he is more likely to act rashly, as he does when he murders Desdemona. Emilia cry of “you the blacker devil!” (5.2.161) illustrates that those surrounding Othello already believed him to be a monster, and his actions have now fulfilled this stereotype. Othello and Sam are made into savages because that is what their societies have expected of …show more content…

Both Sam and Othello mutate from strong and respectable men into the monsters other characters and their societies believe them to be. Despite their similarities, the tales have a significant divide: Othello has no mention of improvement on racism, but “Master Harold”... and the boys speaks of progress through the symbolism of the kite. The kite is used to give Hally hope again after he becomes ashamed of his father; in the end, it is used after the racially-charged argument between Sam and Hally. They need to “[f]ly another kite… [because Sam] need[s] it as much as [Hally does]” (Fugard, 59). In Othello, there is no hope for improvement; three centuries later, Fugard’s Hally and Sam speak of hope for change, and the ending suggests their relationship will be recovered. In comparing Shakespeare and Fugard’s works, the audience sees significant improvement in racism. The plays prompt one to evaluate how their behaviors and actions impact others, and how they can work to improve the grotesque treatment of

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