Home > Shakespearean Criticism > Othello (Vol. 53) - Phyllis Natalie Braxton (essay date 1990)
Othello (Vol. 53) - Phyllis Natalie Braxton (essay date 1990)
Phyllis Natalie Braxton (essay date 1990)
SOURCE: “Othello: The Moor and the Metaphor,” in South Atlantic Review, Vol. 55, No. 4, November, 1990, pp. 1-17.
[In the essay below, Braxton contends that Othello is not a play about race, and suggests “a dramaturgical purpose for the character's blackness. …”]
Although the circumstance of Othello's blackness is often assumed to embody a racial problem, as in K. W. Evans's assertion in “The Racial Factor in Othello” that “no analysis of the play can be adequate if it ignores the factor of race” (125), Shakespeare's play itself demonstrates that Othello's color outweighs in significance the element of race.1 Physical characteristics, of course, help define race, and Othello's black skin and thick lips identify him as a member of the Negroid race, as distinguished from either the Caucasoid or Mongoloid races. The difficulty of determining Othello's...
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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
