hey i have a question on OTHELLO
othello is ultimately responsible for the play's tragic outcomes?
hey i have a question on OTHELLO
othello is ultimately responsible for the play's tragic outcomes?
Hello Joyce, welcome to the forums
Perhaps you want to share some of your ideas. Even if you don't know whether he is responsible, you can start trying to figure it out by looking at the outcomes like the deaths of Desdemona...(edit: "and Cassio" removed, I'm so silly sometimes). What caused their tragic ends, was it Iago's cruel behind-the-scenes work, or Othello's failure to approach Desdemona herself about what he thought was happening?
When I was studying Othello, I found this summary helpful:
http://pinkmonkey.com/booknotes/monk...mOthello02.asp
Last edited by Shannanigan; 11-08-2006 at 08:24 PM.
You learn more about a road by travelling it than by consulting all of the maps in the world.
You learn more about a road by travelling it than by consulting all of the maps in the world.
Well... Cassio is certainly wounded at the hand of Iago. Iago kills then Emelia when she "betrays" him. Then Iago himself is wounded but not killed. He is rather left in Cassio's hands to torture, imprison and perhaps execute for his crimes (his exact fate is not made clear at the end). And, of course, Othello kills himself. Surely that's enough violence... :-)
And no slap necessary. There are alot of plays and alot of deaths. Nobody can remember them all. Thus my home Shakespeare library for reference!
Arlene Schulman
Stage Director / Dramaturg / Cockeyed Optimist
"Lord, we know what we are, but know not what we may be."... Ophelia
yes, this is a tragedy, knowing that, look for a tragic flaw that causes the terrible events. for othello the tragic flaw is jealousy, also over trusting, and tied into that last one is acting to rashly