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Essay on Racism and Interracial Marriage in Othello

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Racism and Interracial Marriage in Othello

Othello: The Moor of Venice is probably Shakespeare's most controversial play. Throughout this work, there is a clear theme of racism, a racism that has become commonplace in Venetian society which rejects the marriage of Othello and Desdemona as anathema. The text expresses racism throughout the play within the language transaction of the dialogue to question the societal ethos established by Othello, thereby making him nothing less than a cultural "other." Furthermore, the character of Desdemona is displayed as mad, or out of her wits, for marrying such an "other," and the audience sees her slip from an angelic state of purity to that of a tainted character. Also, the menacing Iago, a …show more content…

Why else would he address the senator Brabantio with something that was really none of his business? If one believes that miscegenation is a taboo currently manifested within the play then he/she will see how Iago was acting as a representative of society -- a synecdoche responsible for pointing out that something has gone wrong -- with a hidden purpose or motive that was the locus for his actions. Iago is the antithetical character of Shakespeare's creation. He is the catalyst of all the destructive happenings within the play starting from the very beginning of the play when he and Roderigo approach the residence of Brabantio, Desdemona's father, in Act 1 scene 1. He uses racist language to appeal to the senator's traditional beliefs, including such phrases as "Even now, now, very now, an old black ram / Is tupping your white ewe (1.1.85-86). Iago even goes so far as to hypothesize that Brabantio's grandchildren will be animals because of his daughter's base marriage with an "other."

you'll have your daughter covered with a Barbary

horse, you'll have your nephews neigh to you

you'll have coursers for cousins, and gennets for

germans. (1.1.108-111)

Iago plays out the importance of his role when he further states that he is the one, almost as if he were appointed to such a position, who must inform Brabantio that his daughter and the Moor were "making the beast with two backs" (1.1.112-113). But

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