Othello AO2

Cards (11)

  • Asides
    • "This is the night that either makes me, or fordoes me quite" - Iago A5S1
    • Used to emphasise themes of loyalty, race and deception
    • "Close to sympathising with the villain" - Honigmann
    • "Dramatic perspectives can even make us the villain's accomplices" - Honigmann
  • Othello's soliloquy
    • "Yet she must die, else she'll betray more men" - Othello, A5S2
    • Speaking to himself shows decline in mental health, which was a sign of weak masculinity for Jacobean audience
    • "The noble Othello is now tragically pathetic" - Leavis
  • Iago's positioning
    • In the Globe production, Iago hides himself from Brabantio using the pillars
    • Is a visual representation of his characteristic modus operandus: manipulating others in the mode of the director
  • Entrances and exists
    • Othello shouts "Excellent wretch!" after D exists in A3S1
    • Shows how Iago has corrupted him to hate her
    • "The guise of a madman" - Mack
  • Props
    • Handkerchief is "ocular proof"
    • Colour white mirrors wedding sheets, often used as a symbol of virginity
    • Colour red mirrors corruption or violence
  • Proxemics of Othello
    • "[He kneels]" to Iago in A3S3
    • Visual representation of the change of hierarchy
  • Othello's stylized speech patterns
    • Speaks in blank verse with an eloquence and style that has an elevated tone
    • Example - "My parts, my title and my perfect soul shall manifest me rightly. is it they?"
    • Towards the end his syntax becomes more broken and frantic, representing his mental state
    • However, the loftiness of his tone proves consistent, showing the forever valued importance of status in Venice
  • Animalistic imagery
    • "Old black ram is tupping your white ewe" - Iago, A1S1
    • "Making the beast with two backs" - Iago, A1S1
    • Emphasises racial tension
    • "Black skinned people were typed as godless, bestial, and hideous, fit only to be saved" - Loomba
  • Hamartia (ignorance of facts)
    • Othello "strikes" Desdemona when she tries to plead her innocence
    • Shows Jacobean patriarchal values
    • Links to Great Chain of Being
  • Pathos (Acts destructive of life)
    • "Where should Othello go?" - Othello
    • Kills himself after he realises what he's done
    • "Othello is overcome with the pathos of it" - Leavis
    • "He has discovered his mistake, but there is no tragic self-discovery" - Leavis
  • Foil characters
    • Emilia is a foil to Desdemona as she stands up for women's voices
    • "Their ills instruct us so" and "I do believe its husband's faults if their wives do fall" compared to "Nobody, I myself"
    • "Female openness was considered dangerous" - Loomba