Othello
read book* *Different edition

Othello

by
3.86 of 5 stars 3.86  ·  rating details  ·  136,395 ratings  ·  1,944 reviews
Scott McMillin has added a new section on key events in scholarship and theater since the 1980s (including international, political, feminist and postcolonial analysis) to this updated edition of Shakespeare's Othello. The influence of historicism and cultural materialism are also taken into account, and a complete description of performances of the play on stage, film and...more
Paperback, 221 pages
Published October 20th 2003 by Cambridge University Press (first published 1603)
more details... edit details

Friend Reviews

To see what your friends thought of this book, please sign up.
This book is not yet featured on Listopia. Add this book to your favorite list »

Community Reviews

(showing 1-30 of 3,000)
filter  |  sort: default (?)  |  rating details
Madeline
Othello, abridged:

OTHELLO: I love my wife!

IAGO: She gave Cassio her handkerchief.

OTHELLO: OMG THAT CHEATING WHORE!

DESDEMONA: Hi honey!

OTHELLO: I KEEL YOU!

DESDEMONA: *dies*

EMILIA: Dude, what is WRONG with you?

OTHELLO: Huh?

IAGO: Yeah, I totally made that whole wife-is-cheating-on-you thing up. PUNK'D!

OTHELLO: OMG I KILLED MY WIFE FOR NO REASON! I KEEL MYSELF!

and...scene.
Joshua Parkinson
Will you, I pray, demand that demi-devil
Why he hath thus ensnared my soul and body?
-Othello, end of Act V

When I was about 9 years old, I put a healthy, live mouse into my parents' microwave oven. It was a summer day and I was all alone. I had this devilish feeling inside me. I knew it was wrong, but I had to do it. I grabbed a kitchen chair, dragged it across the floor, stood on it, opened the door, and threw the mouse in. Then I hit start.

At first it was no big deal. The light turned on inside,...more
Greg
Here is my copy of Othello with the felty suspicious looking fox bookmark that Karen made for my birthday:



He's protecting this book, and doesn't trust anyone!

Othello would have done well to be a little less trustworthy. Silly Moor.

A bunch of other reviews I noticed have pointed out that this is in some way a great study of sexual jealousy. I think this is an interesting reading of the play, and really more telling of the reader and his or her own feelings / history than the play itself. If thi...more
Paul
Interpolation in the original text recently discovered in the Bodleian Library, Oxford, England. Believed to be by Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford. I have rendered the non-Shakespearean text in bold :



OTHELLO
I have a salt and sorry rheum offends me;
Lend me thy handkerchief.

DESDEMONA
Here, my lord.

OTHELLO
That which I gave you.

DESDEMONA
I have it not about me.

OTHELLO
Not?

DESDEMONA
No, indeed, my lord.

OTHELLO
That is a fault. That handkerchief
Did an Egyptian to my mother give;
She was a charmer...more
Adam Floridia
1/13/13 4 stars: Moore readings (get it?) inevitably = more appreciation of the irony drenching every line. This time an astute student inspired me to focus more on Desdemona's character than Iago or Othello's. What kind of women is she? She certainly is the seducer in the couple's relationship, and she willfully deceives her father. Until she becomes the accused, she talks back to Othello and exerts her will over him (too her detriment, she won't stop bugging him about Cassio). In the end, thou...more
Jonathan

In my opinion, Othello focuses upon one of Shakespeare's great literary devices. The misunderstandings between characters fuel this intelligent plot and provide grounds for Shakespeare to tantalize his audience. We the reader (or the viewer) recognise that of course Desdemona is innocent and that Iago is the mischief maker in the plot. And so to build suspense Shakespeare dangles this information tantalisingly in front of our very noses.

The one problem I have with Othello is the nature of its c...more
Alex
The white on black, the black on white
Explosive mix it makes, so easy to ignite
By jealousy venom, inserted drop by drop into suspicious mind,
And vicious fantasies force fatal spring of hate to wind
And there you go ... flame of rage
Burns out lives, while getting out of its mental cage

1. Memorable 5
2. Social Relevance 5
3. Informative 3
4. Originality 5
5. Thought Provoking 5
6. Expressiveness 5
7. Entertaining 3
8. Visualization 4
9. Sparks Emotion 5
10. Life Changing (Pivotal, crucial, determining,...more
Esdaile
You need to be a certain age to understand and appreciate this drama of the ravages of jealousy, that "green eyed monster which doth mock the meat it feeds on". I disliked the character Othello when I first saw this play when I was about 14 but I was a couple of years too young to understand. Later, the play becomes harrowing. Two elements need to be taken into consideration to appreciate this play, no three-1)jealousy makes blind and turns a man or woman into a donkey, 2) we should never forget...more
Paul Dinger
Iago thinks everyone is evil and to prove it he makes his friend Othello kill his wife. Why? If we knew, Iago wouldn't be so evil. A persistent theme through out the comedies is how is love proven and what is more important, friendship or love. Here these themes are deadly serious, and therein lies the tragedy. Othello does trust his friendship more than Desdomonia, if he didn't wouldn't he see thru this idiot plot? Much is made of Othello's skin color by critics, but really that is just a herri...more
Robin
I loathe this play. Othello loves his wife and yet he doubts her by trusting Iago, who he knows is an unsavory fellow? Moron.
Kristen
Yeah, I've finally conquered my fear of Shakespeare . . . next up: dogs.
Ayne Ray
Hands down the worst pillow fight in history.
Jane
OMG WTF SO TRAGIC
Riku Sayuj
Mar 16, 2012 Riku Sayuj rated it 5 of 5 stars Recommends it for: Everyone
Recommended to Riku by: Prof Neerja Pande
Shelves: reviews, favorites
I decided to start my mission to read all 38 of The Complete Plays of Shakespeare with Othello. It turned out to be a good decision to start with the New Cambridge edition.

I was considering this reading as an academic reading of the bard and it generally took me almost 3 hours of constant reading to get through one average sized (10-15 pages) scene! Even after reading every scene three times - once aloud and twice normally - I still never felt I had enough of it, and moved on to the next only du...more
LeAnn
Excellent wretch! Perdition catch my soul But I do love thee! and when I love thee not, Chaos is come again. -- Othello, Act 3, scene 3, 90–95

And in saying, Othello foreshadows the chaos that rapidly descends upon the players -- him most of all. As Othello's violent emotional storm continues to build to its climax, Iago stands in the eye directing it with the cool detachment of the sociopath. Othello's words also foreshadow his soul's doom -- "perdition catch my soul" -- when he fails to hold fa...more
Becky
I enjoy Shakespeare, but sometimes I really wonder at him. Of course, he was a genius, but I don't really feel like this was his best work. If it had been filled in a little, and was a bit more fleshed out, it would have been much better in my opinion.

Basic story (And there will be plot spoilers here), love-struck Othello is manipulated by Iago into believing that his freshly-minted bride is cheating on him with his friend. Othello then hires said manipulator to off said friend (now ex-friend)...more
BlueSky&Sunshine
I really enjoyed reading the original Othello in high school. I thought it very humorous and clever. You will definitely see a lot of Shakespeare's culture influenced in this story. It's a classic that should be read (the original) at least once in your life. I went to a really and I mean REALLY ghetto school for a bit of my sophomore year and my English teacher said that we wouldn't read most of the classics like in other schools because most people didn't know how to read or found the classics...more
Seizure Romero
I can't really give this one a fair rating. Amazing, yes; Iago is arguably the most devious bastard in western literature, yes; great depth & complexity of characters-- all of this is true. My problem is that in graduating from high school and subsequently earning an English degree I had to read this play at least six times. For some reason this was every professor's favorite example of Shakespearean tragedy, villainy, character interaction, storytelling, you name it. I have been intellectua...more
Chris
"Bloody, bawdy villain!
Remorseless, treacherous, lecherous, kindless villain!"

That's Hamlet the Slow Avenger ranting about Claudius, but the same and bolder could be said of Iago. I know he's the vilest of Shakespeare's villains--which would place him high in the running for vilest world-wide--but at some point those just become words. It's the page-by-page visceral experience of watching him secrete his evil that makes my blood boil. As I reread this, I wanted to throw the book, tear it, set it...more
Nazmus sakib
that's a nice work by the great man i think before merry u should read this book it will help u to get happy life forever .in our life there's an yago who always make some bad things so u should know about this yago and love the desdemonia (
Lara
Although I haven't actually read it yet, Shakespeare was meant to be seen as performance anyway, right? Othello is my absolute favorite of Shakespeare's play. I was on the edge of my seat almost the entire time- most unusual for a Shakespeare, where normally the ending is looming and obvious.
On a side note, one of my favorite movies is Stage Beauty with Claire Danes, which explores themes of gender and asks questions about behavior in relation to Desdemona and Othello.
Rid yourself of high school...more
Courtney
Apr 29, 2010 Courtney added it  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: no one
Recommended to Courtney by: Miss Roth
Othello Othello is a tragedy written by William Shakespeare. This book deals with jealous, deceit, and murder. Othello is a play written in Shakespeare’s time period of the late 1500’s to early 1600’s. The main problem or topic in this play is Othello is lead to believe that his wife, Desdemona is cheating on him. There is not really a target audience that Shakespeare was trying to reach. After having read Othello, I think it was a well written tragedy for that time period and Shakespeare was a...more
Christina
YOYA CODE: 5Q 4P

A. Pre-Reading/Anticipatory Thoughts:

I read this book for the second time this semester before I taught it to my seniors at KMHS. The first time I read it was for my Shakespeare seminar my last undergraduate year in college. I enjoyed it the first time because the timeless themes apply to today's culture in several ways. Iago's jealousy and motives are based on hearsay; many people today get jealous for lesser offenses than Iago believes Othello and Cassio commit. If we turn...more
Stevie
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Emily L. Moir-Genther
Othello has to be my personal favorite by Shakespeare. I definitely vote Iago as best villain ever. The depths of emotion and betrayal that are explored in this story speak of age old human dilemmas, yet transcend time to still be relevant today.

I love how clever Iago is as he sets everyone up for failure, and I find how misguided and hurt he is to be beautiful. Don't get me wrong, I'm totally over the whole broody male stereo type (i.e. "girl's don't go for the broody guy" or "I don't usually...more
Melissa
This is what I wrote for school:

In the play Othello, written by William Shakespeare, Othello the main character is deceived by Iago the villain and mastermind of the tragedy. More importantly he was blinded by his own emotions and feelings to the point of losing his mind. Lies and jealousy lead him to act irrationally and murder his own wife.

Othello never got his own proof nor investigated Iago's accusations towards Desdemona because he put all his trust in Iago. Othello saw Iago as a honest and...more
Miguel Jiménez
Una muy buena obra de teatro que considero superior —por una buena diferencia— de la tan famosa "Romeo y Julieta".

Me gustó mucho el personaje de Yago, el manejo en general que le dio Shakespeare es excepcional. Toda su maldad, cinismo e hipocresía es muy disfrutable, pues aunque me llegó a dar algo de coraje lo que estaba leyendo, jaja, y que yo no podía hacer nada creo que esto es precisamente lo que hace que se disfrute.

Una obra que refleja a la perfección cómo los seres humanos creemos más lo...more
Clement Yeboah
Shakespeare’s purpose for writing Othello is to tell his audience that what goes around comes around. He wants to tell people that whatever you do will either have positive or negative effect depending on what you start in the first place. The story is written to tell readers to know who their real friends are meaning know who you can trust to not put you in a bad position or rely on to never betray you. Iago tricked Othello into killing his wife and betrayed Rodrigo by killing him after promis...more
Allison Evans
William

Shakespeare's purpose in writing Othello was to entertain. Along with the purpose of entertainment I think Shakespeare wrote to teach a lesson. When reading the book a prevalent theme was that truth always prevails.


 The

theme that was most prevalent in the tragic play was truth always prevails, and jealousy can turn you into an unrecognizable monster. He demonstrated these themes well throughout the play. Especially in the ending scene when he shows the ultimate outcome. The outcome of t

...more
Stephanie Flood
William Shakespeare wrote "Othello" in 1604 about the time when his knowledge of human nature was in full throttle, written after "Richard II." It explores the wounds of human tragedy, suffering, and the fall of good characters that seemingly deserve happiness. There is much to be gained from analyzing this play, the characters, their motivations and their own actions that lead to such a cruel, dark ending.

First off, this was based off an Italian short story called "Un Capitano Moro" by Giraldi...more
« previous 1 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 99 100 next »
topics  posts  views  last activity   
Who was your favorite character? 6 34 Apr 15, 2013 11:50pm  
the moor! 15 79 Apr 13, 2013 11:39am  
Did anybody else fall madly in love with Othello? 11 39 Apr 08, 2013 01:50am  
Othello (Paperback)
Othello (Paperback)
Othello  (Paperback)
Othello (The Arden Shakespeare: Third Series)
Othello (Paperback)

947
William Shakespeare (baptised 26 April 1564) was an English poet and playwright, widely regarded as the greatest writer in the English language and the world's pre-eminent dramatist. He is often called England's national poet and the "Bard of Avon" (or simply "The Bard"). His surviving works consist of 38 plays, 154 sonnets, two long narrative poems, and several other poems. His plays have been tr...more
More about William Shakespeare...
Romeo and Juliet Hamlet Macbeth A Midsummer Night's Dream Much Ado About Nothing

Share This Book

Your website
51 trivia questions
3 quizzes
More quizzes & trivia...
“O, beware, my lord, of jealousy;
It is the green-ey'd monster, which doth mock
The meat it feeds on.”
102 people liked it
“The robb'd that smiles, steals something from the thief; He robs himself that spends a bootless grief.” 101 people liked it
More quotes…