Sax's Unjust Treatment Of Women In Othello

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The contextual values and ideas of a time are inevitably reflected within the works produced by a composer of that era, serving as a commentary of society. The Shakespearean play Othello reflects the adversarial nature of society, consisting of the interactions of outsiders and society. Shakespeare presents the struggles faced by the subjugated female gender, caused by the naivety of men within society. Similarly, Geoffrey Sax’s contemporary reinterpretation of Othello parallels the gender inequalities present within Elizabethan society, criticising society’s unjust treatment of women. Likewise, Shakespeare highlights the presence of prejudicial values within the Elizabethan era towards foreign ethnicities, criticising society’s unjust perception …show more content…

Sax refers to the 1985 Brixton Riots, a riot against London police after a “black” woman was unlawfully shot, to express his criticism of the unjust prejudice towards foreign ethnicities. Similarly, within Sax’s Othello, a “black” man is beaten to death by English police. Whilst not explicitly said, it’s suggested that it was a race driven crime due to an excess of animosity, accentuated by the rapid transitions and close ups of the man’s face, tense with pain. Likewise, the presence of racial prejudice within society is portrayed through the police director’s mockery of the “blacks” when asked about “black policemen”: “If we could find any with brains as big as their dicks then I’d be a happy man”. The authenticity of such scenes is amplified through the close position camera’s position to characters, illustrated by its fixed standpoint whilst Jago and the chief police are in the bathroom, illuminating to the audience the injustice of the prejudicial attitudes present within society, enforcing Sax’s criticism of his era. Sax’s criticism of racial prejudice amongst society is reflected within his Othello, serving to diffuse unjust perceptions of foreign

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