Introduction To Othello
Introduction To Othello
Shakespeares Othello
Then must you speak
Of one that loved not wisely, but too well
William Shakespeare
Born in April 1564 in Stratford-
on-Avon
Received a classical education
including Latin, Greek, history,
math, astronomy, and music
Most likely began as an actor
Wrote 38 plays, including
comedies, histories, tragedies,
and romances
Wrote 4 lengthy poems and a
sonnet cycle
Shakespeare Vocabulary
Verse vs. Prose Aside
Meter Monologue
Foot Soliloquy
Iambic Pentameter Allusion
Blank Verse vs. Free Foil
Verse Tragedy
Sonnet Tragic Hero
Quatrain Tragic Flaw
Couplet
Verse vs. Prose
Verse: Poetic language that includes
meter and sometimes rhyme;
organized in lines with a
consistent number of syllables
Venice = order,
rule of reason ?
Cyprus = disorder,
rule of passion ?
Othello: Poetic Images
Focused on the natural world
Most important pattern contrast
of light and dark, black and white
One cluster is domestic and
animal: goats, monkeys, wolves,
baboons, guinea hens, wildcats,
spiders, flies, asses, dogs, horses,
sheep, serpents, and toads
Other images include green-eyed
monsters, devils, poisons, money
purses, tarnished jewels, music
untuned, and light extinguished
Othello: the Villain
Delights in evil for its own sake
Conscienceless, sinister, and amused by his own
cunning
Related to Vice, the figure of personified evil, from
the medieval morality play whose role is to win
Humankind away from virtue and corrupt him with
worldly enticements
Takes audience into his confidence, boasts in
soliloquy of his cleverness, exults in the triumph of
evil, and improvises plans with daring and
resourcefulness
Othello: Thematic Ideas
Nature of love and marriage
Nature of jealousy
Nature and use of language
Male mistrust of women
Deception / Honesty
Importance of reputation
The Plot
The plot is simple. A man, disappointed of promotion which
he thought he had a right to expect, determines on revenge
and in part secures it. By a series of careful moves he
persuaded the General (Othello) of the adultery of the
General's wife (Desdemona) with the lieutenant (Cassio) who
has been promoted ahead of him. As a result, the general first
kills his wife then himself, but the ensign (Iago) fails in the
second part of his design, since the plot is disclosed. Cassio
receives yet a further promotion and Iago is left facing trial
and torture. The plot "scheme" is concerned with one of the
strangest and most distressing of human emotions - jealousy -
and this is what makes the plot powerful.
Famous Jealous people
Famous Jealous people
Quotes about Jealousy
Jealousy is indeed a poor medium to secure love,
but it is a secure medium to destroy one's self-
respect. For jealous people, like dope-fiends,
stoop to the lowest level and in the end inspire
only disgust and loathing.
Emma Goldman
Quotes about Jealousy
Love may be blind but jealousy has 20-20 vision.
Anonymous
Quotes about Jealousy
Jealousy is the jaundice of the soul.
John Dryden
Themes
The plays central theme is love
destruction of love = hate
love and hate together arouse jealousy.
The central conflict is between men and women and
this is presented through a series of parallel and
contrasting couples.
Desdemona/Othello, Emilia/Iago, Bianca/Cassio and
a number of fantasy couples:
Roderigo/Desdemona, Cassio/Desdemona,
Othello/Emilia.