Home > Shakespearean Criticism > Othello (Vol. 53) - Janet Adelman (essay date 1997)
Othello (Vol. 53) - Janet Adelman (essay date 1997)
Janet Adelman (essay date 1997)
SOURCE: “Iago's Alter Ego: Race as Projection in Othello,” in Shakespeare Quarterly, Vol. 48, No. 2, Summer, 1997, pp. 125-44.
[In the following essay, Adelman discusses Iago's role in corrupting Othello's views on race and sexuality.]
Othello famously begins not with Othello but with Iago. Other tragedies begin with ancillary figures commenting on the character who will turn out to be at the center of the tragedy—one thinks of Lear, Macbeth, Antony and Cleopatra—but no other play subjects its ostensibly tragic hero to so long and intensive a debunking before he even sets foot onstage. And the audience is inevitably complicit in this debunking: before we meet Othello, we are utterly dependent on Iago's and Roderigo's descriptions of him. For the first long minutes of the play, we know only that the Moor, “the thicklips” (1.1.66),1 has done something that Roderigo...
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- Introduction
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Criticism: Race
- Ruth Cowhig (essay date 1977)
- Phyllis Natalie Braxton (essay date 1990)
- James R. Andreas (essay date 1992)
- Kim Hall (essay date 1993)
- James R. Aubrey (essay date 1993)
- Margo Hendricks (essay date 1996)
- Janet Adelman (essay date 1997)
- Michael Neill (essay date 1998)
- Patrick C. Hogan (essay date 1998)
- Virginia Mason Vaughan (essay date 1998)
- Criticism: Gender Issues
- Criticism: Language And Imagery
- Criticism: Social Background
- Further Reading
- Copyright
