Othello
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Two different Othello's
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☯Emily
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Mar 03, 2014 08:19PM

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It's just a matter of someone finding that weak spot and working on it hard enough.
Name me your hero; there's a weak spot.


The world is filled with men and women who kill out of jealousy - called 'crimes of passion' and happens all the time. To the good and the bad, the noble and the beasts.
Currently, there is a trial going on where an Olympian (brave and noble, apparently) is in the dock for more or less the same thing. Allegedly.
Jealously - the green eyed monster - no rhyme or reason when it takes hold.
Never doubt Shakespeare - he understands human behaviour better than most.

Thanks, Emily, but I'm 'countersuggestible' and even argue with myself.
Having thought more about it, maybe Shakey doesn't need me as his apologist. If he'd wanted to show Iago doing a long con, which is kind of what I expected when I read it, let's assume he probably could have pulled that off.
The explanation the text provides, when Othello expresses amazement that Iago has human feet, is that Iago is almost demonically persuasive.
Which does throw us back on a different question: Why it wouldn't occur to a man of the world and battle-hardened veteran that even his buddy might deceive him. Is simplicity really a characteristic of a successful soldier?
My guess would be that part of being a 'band of brothers' is that if you get in the habit of trusting somebody, even with your life, it becomes a habit. But I don't recall any textual evidence to support that view. I'll have to look again.

I agree. Othello changed completely in two days, going from a loving husband to a murderer.

I kept thinking that it would make more sense if Othello has some reason to think his relationship is 'too good to be true'. And of course, he does. Her father has told him she'll cheat on him.
So Iago only has to water the seed, which is not only already planted, but arguably well-fertilized by....the eternal verity and validity of murderous jealousy as a motivation/justification.

Modern audiences can argue that the transformation, the degeneration of Othello's personality from capable, honourable soldier to violent, raging murderer happens too quickly, but the counterargument is a) that this is the power of jealousy, b) that this is the nature of Othello's fatal flaw - his emotional intelligence is brittle and untested by previous love, and c) not to put too fine a point on it, Elizabethan audiences wanted entertainment and they wanted it fast.
As mentioned above, Othello's a stranger to the Venetian way of life, so he's particularly susceptible to the idea that Venetian women are treacherous - as her father says, "look to her Moor, if thou hast eyes to see. She did deceive her father, and may thee..." - a point on which Iago harps - "she did deceive her father, marrying you. In Venice they do let heaven see the tricks they dare not show their husband" and so on. And on the question of absolute proof, Iago cunningly covers that base too - "You would be satisfied? And may, but how? Would you grossly gape on, behold her - topped?" - He's telling Othello the only absolute proof would be to watch Desdemona and Casio together in bed - and which modern cuckold would want that burned on their brain? So, he shifts the need for proof down a gear - "if imputation, which leads directly to the door of truth might give you satisfaction, you might have it." A clever and well-observed piece of writing, that, as well as allowing the plot to actually work.
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