Othello (Vol. 53) | James R. Aubrey (essay date 1993)
James R. Aubrey (essay date 1993)
SOURCE: “Race and the Spectacle of the Monstrous in Othello,” in CLIO, Vol. 22, No. 3, Spring, 1993, pp. 221-38.
[In the essay below, Aubrey attempts to show that Shakespeare's construction of Othello's character would have “engaged such popular associations of blacks with monsters and thereby would have intensified audience responses to early performances.”]
Whoever believed in the Ethiopians before actually seeing them?
Pliny
Near the end of The Tempest, Antonio jests that the monster Caliban “is a plain fish, and no doubt marketable.” As an earlier remark in the play makes clear, however, Caliban would be valuable not only in a fishmarket but also as an exotic creature for display at court, “a present for any emperor that ever trod on neat's leather.”1 When Shakespeare was writing Othello, his attraction to Cinthio's narrative about a...
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