Othello And Desdemona essay topics

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  • Othello And Desdemona
    3,248 words
    ROLE OF WOMEN ESSAY When reviewing literature, a major question being posed lately is what exactly are women's roles in various books. The works, which I am particularly concerned with in this essay, are William Shakespeare's "Othello" and Thomas More's "Utopia". I will be examining various themes of "Othello", in order to figure out where exactly women fit in with the work. These include things like the symbols used, the expectations and virtual rules for a female at the time (especially one fr...
  • Othello And Desdemona
    993 words
    William Shakespeare's Othello is a play set in Venice. The plot is based on a story about two people who love each other dearly and the problems and conflicts they face from the start. The conflicts are, for the most part, tied in with racial issues and questions of loyalty. These conflicts stem from the society around the couple, as well as from the couple themselves as they too are part of this society, but with very different backgrounds: The female protagonist is the daughter of a highly-res...
  • Central Female Characters In Hamlet And Othello
    2,009 words
    The Tragic Fate of Shakespeare's Women Within the tragedies of Shakespeare there exists a wide variety of women, ranging from the naive to the aware. However regardless of how alert they are these women are still unable to escape their inevitable death. This is not due to their own tragic flaws; rather, the flaws exist in the relationship to the men with whom they associate. In Hamlet and Othello the four central female characters are surrounded by powerful male figures that see no problem in us...
  • Desdemona And Simon
    1,176 words
    Lord of the Flies and Othello Comparison The age-old theme of good versus evil is presented in both William Golding's Lord of the Flies (LOT), and William Shakespeare's Othello. The characters are used to show the battle between the two. Simon and Desdemona who represent purity and embody an innate goodness are challenged by many characters that do not possess the same holy qualities- who have actually subsided to the evil that is, in every way, their opposite. Jack and Iago represent the evil i...
  • Othello Contrasts Order And Chaos In Order
    1,222 words
    In his play Othello, Shakespeare uses many elements to enhance the tragedy of the piece. He uses Desdemona as the ultimate innocent victim and he uses true love to arouse our pity. However, most important is the way in which he uses the journey from order to chaos to allow us to trace how the tragedy progresses. He uses the physical journey from Venice to Cyprus, Othello's emotional disintegration, and the fall of Iago's plan to show how the play falls into chaos and from there into tragedy. The...
  • Plays Othello And Oedipus Rex
    1,994 words
    In both "Othello" and "Oedipus Rex" to a great extent, the emotions provoked by familiar human experiences are acceptable to all people of all times. It is a fact that "Human nature remains the same (Kiernan Ryan 1989)". Both plays explore issues surrounding emotions like love, envy, jealousy and pride provoked by life experiences such as racism, fate, rifts between parent and child, a quest for position through deception or for justice or an intoxicating sense of being all powerful which transc...
  • Iago's Honesty As Othello
    2,946 words
    Act i. sc. i. ADMIRABLE is the preparation, so truly and peculiarly Shakspearian, in the introduction of Roderigo, as the dupe on whom Iago shall first exercise his art, and in so doing display his own character. Roderigo, without any fixed principle, but not without the moral notions and sympathies with honour, which his rank and connections had hung upon him, is already well fitted and predisposed for the purpose; for very want of character and strength of passion, like wind loudest in an empt...
  • Good Reputation With Othello
    1,763 words
    ... their sheaths,' and 'the dew will rust them' is a bit of gentle sarcasm. Othello is reminding the men he's facing that their swords will be quite useless. He and his men are soldiers. Brabantio's men are policemen and civilians. It is quite impossible for Brabantio and his men to win any fight against Othello and his men. [Scene Summary] At the Senate, replying to Brabantio's accusations, Othello first pays his respects to all present, addressing them as 'Most potent, grave, and reverend sig...
  • Bianca's Mistreatment
    819 words
    Shakespeare's Othello is commonly regarded as a work depicting man's ability to use his reason towards evil intentions. A lowly ancient in a general's army is able to destroy him through manipulation and deceit. But although Iago's deceit of Othello is undoubtedly a central theme in the play, another theme regarding the nature of the man towards woman is apparent. Shakespeare's Othello suggests that men mistreat women because women, as a sex, allow themselves to be mistreated. The mistreatment o...
  • Desdemona's Loyalty To Othello
    957 words
    Desdemona, the bride of Othello, and Emilia, the wife of the villain Iago, are the two principal female characters in Shakespeare's Othello. Although they are both very loyal to their husbands, a sharp contrast between these women is realized with regard to Desdemona's innocence and idealism and Emilia's experience and realism. Desdemona and Emilia are loyal characters who want to please their husbands. Desdemona's loyalty to Othello reaches to her superceding her loyalty to her father and movin...
  • Othello Of Kidnapping His Daughter
    816 words
    Father of the Bride While little girls are eagerly anticipating the day they will meet the man of their dreams, they are also imagining up their dream wedding. Fathers, on the other hand, are secretly dreading the day to come. They do their best to see that the "right" man will marry their daughter. But at the same time, they want to try to keep them from meeting him so soon. In William Shakespeare's Othello, Brabantio is protective, racially prejudiced, and a heartbroken man. He represents the ...
  • Hands And Taming Of The Shrew
    883 words
    Tainted Perception In a world where crime happens every minute, people are killed daily, and adultery runs rampant, it is hard for society to gain an optimistic view of their world. In literary pieces such as Othello, The Scarlet Letter, and "Hands", and Taming of the Shrew, this pessimistic view placed in society is easy to see. Because society is often solely focused on only the evil of the world, they are more apt to overlook the inherent good of its people. In Shakespeare's Othello, overlook...
  • Good Relationship Between Othello And Desdemona
    582 words
    Othello is to blame, he believes he is the great general which has converted him into a victim jealousy he turns into a shattered man as he believes that D is betraying him. O has no right to kill D as he calls the killing a sacrifice but really of mistakes. O knows his weane and that he is jealous in losing and looses temper quick but he cannot help himself. O weaknesses are shown when he depends on the society. In General he was a dirty more, the black ram this so called specie has made the so...

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