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Iago's Alter Ego Race As Subjection In Othello Summary

Decent Essays

Adelman, Janet. “Iago’s Alter Ego: Race as Projection in Othello.” Shakespeare Quarterly 48.2 (1997): 125 44.

In this essay, Adelman reads Othello as a test case for Kleinian psychoanalysis’ ability to deal with problems of race. She is interested in identifying the ways in which racism is the psychic property of the racist rather than the victim. The focus of the analysis is largely based on explaining Iago as an example of Kleinian envy. This notion of envy comes from Klein’s theory about rage and the fantasy of the good breast versus the bad breast (the maternal object that doesn’t provide enough). Kleinian envy is directed at the good breast. The idea is that the baby would rather destroy the good breast by poisoning it (with feces) and obtain control rather than punish the bad breast. Adelman contrasts Iago as the spokesperson for interiority (emptiness) with Othello’s fullness in act one. Iago is able to conflate the hidden with the hideous in Othello and make Othello a projective receptacle for Iago’s envy. Iago projects racist ideology into Othello whose blackness then becomes an external sign for the symbolic feces that Iago injects into the good breast (Othello). Through a …show more content…

Adelman also notes that Othello does change as a result of Iago’s projections; however, Othello remains in

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