Home > Shakespearean Criticism > Othello (Vol. 53) - Ruth Cowhig (essay date 1977)
Othello (Vol. 53) - Ruth Cowhig (essay date 1977)
Ruth Cowhig (essay date 1977)
SOURCE: “The Importance of Othello's Race,” in The Journal of Commonwealth Literature, Vol. XII, No. 2, December, 1977, pp. 153-61.
[In the following essay, Cowhig argues that race is essential to the meaning of Othello.]
There has recently been general agreement amongst critics that Shakespeare conceived of Othello as a Negro, and not as the tawny Arab on whom Coleridge insisted with such vehemence. But there is a considerable gap between critical opinion and the ideas and assumptions that linger on, even when people have some degree of specialized interest. It is more than usually so where Othello's colour is concerned. To speak of a conspiracy of silence might be to use too strong a phrase; but there is a reluctance to disturb accepted ideas, and a Negro Othello has a greater novelty than the study either of critical writing or of stage history would lead one to expect—as I found when reading...
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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
