The Possesion Of Women In Shakespeare's Othello

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To stay true to the Elizabethan era, women in Othello are seen as possession, are meant to submit to their husbands, and to be seen but not heard unless spoken to.

Women in the Elizabethan era were just mere properties for the entertainment and pleasure for men. Now, not all men- some would love to think- thought all women were to be their possession and to use in whatever way they choose, but majority of them did view women as less than them. Othello, a prime example of patriarchal man who disregards the existence of his wife unless it suites him. He dares get upset at the rumours of his wife’s adultery, (he has had his many fills of other women), because he is jealous, and his description of his jealousy is quite barbaric, “Thy bed, lust-stained,

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