Othello Flashcards
Overview
• Honourable
• Outsider
• Impressive
• Believes in the power of love
• Self-assurance
• Tragedy
Mediator (Beginning of the play)
- Prudent (acting with or showing care and thought for the future)
- Doesn’t view violence as a solution
- Uses his strength and speech to prove himself worthy
- Immune to toxic masculinity which defines may heroes in literature and within his own military culture
The leader (the beginning of the play)
• Puts his obligations to others before his own
• Peacemaking
The doting husband (beginning of the play)
• Mutual respect between him and Desdemona
• Shakespeare illustrates the strength Othello draws from Desdemona’s support rather than one’s power over the other
The lover (the beginning)
• Loyalty to his wife
• Love brightens Othello spirit
• Optimist
The gullible disciple (At the beginning)
• Unwavering in his faith in Desdemona’s loyalty
•Othello is too quick to trust when he comments on Iago’s trustworthiness, “good Iago”(Act 2 Scene 1), “most honest”(Act 2 Scene 3)
The Rational Thinker (At the beginning)
- Aware of his own weaknesses and of the temptations
- “Away at once with jealousy”, Shakespeare hints at Othello’s hubris, he is overconfident, believing in himself immune to the feelings that would compromise rational thought
The tortured soul (At the end of the play)
• Act 3 Scene 3
• He gives into paranoia and doubt
• Doubts plaguing Othello’s mind
• Othello’s greatest nemesis is his own mind
• Obsession with evidence, reduces Desdemona to a series of arbitrary objects (the handkerchief)
The warrior (At the end of the play)
• Bloodthirsty side of his army background
• Looses military authority
• Shakespeare details the glorification of violence “farewell the big wars” Act 3 Scene 3
• Feels disconnected from his role
• Love is a weakness and an obstacle he must overcome to attain victory
The Judge, Jury and executioner (At the end of the play)
• His worldview narrows
• Fighting his own personal war
• Lost an awareness of justice and fair trial
• Othello craves the death of his enemies rather than truth
• Lawfulness and justice is centromeres around his desires
• “First to be hanged and then to confess” (Act 4 Scene 1)
The Cuckold
• Feels his identity is being reduced to a cuckold upon Desdemona’s betrayal
• His speech is full of “death and damnation” Act 3 Scene 3
• Craves validation to achieve this, Desdemona, a symbol of insecurity must die