Have You Not Read of Some Such Thing? Sex and Sexual Stories in Othello | "Have You Not Read of Some Such Thing?" Sex and Sexual Stories in Othello

"Have You Not Read of Some Such Thing?" Sex and Sexual Stories in Othello

Edward Pechter, Concordia University

Why does Othello suddenly abandon his affectionate trust in Desdemona for a conviction of betrayal? This question, by placing the protagonist's understanding at the play's centre, takes us back to Bradley's first words about the play in Shakespearean Tragedy: 'the character of Othello is comparatively simple, but . . . essentially the success of Iago's plot is connected with this character. Othello's description of himself as "one not easily jealous" . . . is perfectly just. His tragedy lies in this—that his whole nature was indisposed to jealousy, and yet . . . unusually open to deception'.1 Bradley has long been discredited—a story with which we are all familiar. In 1993 L. C. Knights's 'How Many Children Had Lady Macbeth?' repudiated the notion of treating dramatic characters as the authors and origins...

[The entire page is 11946 words long]

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