Othello Group

Question:

beautifulmind
beautifulmind
Student
High School - 12th Grade

Why did Shakespeare make Othello specifically a Moor? Why is Othello targeted in such an evil and ugly way?

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Posted by beautifulmind on Thursday April 9, 2009 at 12:33 PM and tagged with characters, historical context, moor, othello.


Answers:

  1. mbomengen
    mrsmonica Teacher
    High School - 12th Grade

    Having the hero of the play be a Moor created a character who was exotic and noble, yet for white western Europeans, his African origins suggested a savagery to go along with his nobility. The fact of his interracial marriage creates conflict, although probably not as much for Elizabethan audiences as for modern viewers.

    Othello struggles with great internal conflict, fanned by Iago, over his suspicions that his white wife, Desdemona, might be unfaithful. This struggle parallels the conflict of a dark-skinned foreigner holding a high station in Venetian society.

    Iago is virulently fixated on ruining Othello, probably because Othello passed him over for promotion. Furthermore, Iago suspects that Othello has slept with Emilia, Iago's wife. Iago refers twice to this suspicion, first in Act I: "I hate the Moor, / And it is thought abroad that 'twixt my sheets / He has done my office" (iii.388-390), and again in Act II:

    I do suspect the lusty Moor
    Hath leap'd into my seat; the thought whereof
    Doth (like a poisonous mineral) gnaw my inwards;
    And nothing can or shall content my soul
    Till I am evened with him, wife for wife.
    (i.299-303)

    Iago projects his own inadequacies and insecurities onto Othello, underpinning pure hatred of his superior officer.

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    Posted by mrsmonica on Thursday April 9, 2009 at 4:40 PM