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Oppressed Women In Othello

Decent Essays

Desdemona and Emilia are loyal characters who want to please their husbands. In the play ‘’Othello’’, by William Shakespeare, there are two major feminine roles that attract the reader's attention. The way the women behave is linked to the expectations of Shakespeare’s Elizabethan society. I would like to demonstrate some of the ways in which Desdemona and Emilia are presented and treated in the play. Desdemona and Emilia can be compared and contrasted in a number of ways.

Desdemona is portrayed as a hideous oppressed woman. There is a large body of evidence to support this critical stance. Newly wedded Desdemona is inexperienced and innocent in the "real world" and is in an unstable relationship with Othello. She has slept with another …show more content…

She is unable to realize that it is her behavior towards Cassio which is contributing to Othello’s anger so she then feels conflicted. She is the cause of most of the complexities in the play but it is her simple mindedness and inability to think critically which leads her to trouble. Throughout the play Desdemona symbolizes innocence and helplessness in women. She plays a very big role in how the play ends. What the two women share in common is their sense of loyalty to their husbands. ‘’I never did Offend you in my life ;never loved Cassio But with such general warranty of heaven As I might love. I never gave him token.’’ (5.2.58-61) She is proving her love to her dear Othello whom she has cheated on. As a wife she reassured him of her so-called ‘’love and loyalty’’. Over a period of time, women have fought for the respect and equality; even though these stereotypes still exist today, women are stronger in defending themselves and more respected. I believe that Shakespeare brings the theme of women roles because we learned how women felt during that

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