Analysis Of The Themes In Shakespeare's Tragedy Othello

1989 Words4 Pages

Jordyn Graham
Mrs. Ruth Zollars
ENGL 113-11
December 1, 2017
Analysis of the Themes in Shakespeare’s Tragedy Othello

One of the things most interesting, in my opinion, about Shakespeare is that, he finds a way to play on the emotions every audience member in all of his plays. In Othello, Shakespeare starts by using the prejudice that the English people have for African Americans as well as the hate the English people have for the Spanish. Othello really sweeps the audience into it from the beginning. This paper focuses on the themes that are in Othello. These themes include: jealousy and hate, race and identity, gender and sex, and manipulation. My goal in this paper is to analyze the seven themes mentioned in the last sentence. To achieve
The first theme I would like to analyze is jealousy. Ken Jacobsen writes, “in the first scene of Othello Iago complains about the shabby treatment he believes he has received from his general. … Iago loses the lieutenant to a man he considers his inferior in both qualifications and experience” (497). Iago is a jealous man who seems to be a sore loser because, he didn't get the lieutenancy. He, Iago, throughout the whole play just wanted to get back at Othello for not choosing him as Othello’s second-in-command. The theme of jealousy fits well into this play, Iago uses jealousy and hate to fuel his revenge. He uses Othello’s feelings of intense love for Desdemona, and twists them into doubt and suspicion. Jealousy runs throughout the play. Iago is jealous of Cassio and Othello. When Othello and Cassio are being criticized by Iago, it’s very obvious that he has some sort of unreasonable hate for the general and the lieutenant. Iago also hates both of them and he is hateful to his wife. Iago seems to be able to spread the hatred and jealousy by planting seeds of doubt and manipulating everyone around
The play has a main character who is black, he's married to a white woman, and he is a general. In Shakespeare’s time there was no such thought for an interracial marriage or any sort of black leadership. Othello, before this play started, overcame the standard of his ‘kind’ by rising through the ranks and becoming a respected general. Everyone, in the play, knew he was black and still listened to him, aside from Iago and Brabantio and Roderigo. He found the love of his life in Desdemona, and that may have been ruined because he may have been unsure of

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