In Greek, Desdemona means “Misery/Unlucky”, perhaps reflecting an ideology that she is not meant to be liked and merely pitied for her misfortune as a tragic victim of Othello’s jealousy and Iago’s malevolence. Desdemona is unable to prevent herself from becoming a victim to Othello’s violent behavior, which is caused by his pride being wounded by the idea of society considering him as emasculate by Desdemona’s cuckold. These strong emotions that are being displayed is a vital component of tragedy and as a great tragedy the purging of these emotions that are felt towards these characters are genuinely liked, demonstrating the intricate link between pity and likeability and highlighting the paradox in Othello. With this being said, the audience …show more content…
“Look to her, Moor, if thou hast eyes, to see; She has deceiv’d her father, and may thee.” Through Desdemona’s betrayal, the theme of black versus white becomes apparent as the audience may have thought badly of her marrying a “lusty Moor” due to the social views at that time. Some may have neither liked nor pitied her all because she was a woman without sense who married a blackamoor and the mixed-race of Othello and Desdemona gives Iago the foundation to turn Desdemona’s fair lightness into darkness. “I have told thee often, and I re-tell thee again and again, I hate the Moor; my cause is hearted; thine hath no less reason. Let us be conjunctive in our revenge against him; if thou canst cuckold him, thou dost thyself a pleasure, me a sport. There are many events in the womb of time which will be …show more content…
Desdemona shows confidence and is forthright when she gives her speech, she is the only female character, surrounded by powerful men who include the duke, her husband, and her father, but she is not ashamed to assert her belief in the validity of her desires and actions. But not only did she defy her father, she must show that she is a loyal wife by convincing Othello that she is, her contradictory actions cast doubt upon her character. Without these actions, there would be no controversy for Iago to lay his doubts upon a frustrating thought for the audience. The desire for Desdemona to succeed in proving Othello’s doubts wrong and her inability to do so may cause resentment of her character to some. Her failure to save something so beautiful is disheartening and frustrating. Through these flaws, Shakespeare creates a realistic character, yet it is hard to like someone who is seemingly perfect and hard to believe that anyone could be so kind and pure, which could be contributing to the audience’s
The society in which Othello takes place is a patriarchal one, where men had complete control over women. They were seen as possessions rather than being just as equally human and capable of duties performed by men. All women of the Elizabethan were to obey all men, fathers, brothers, husbands, etc. Which leads me to the most reliable and trustworthy character of Desdemona, whom goes through many trials just to satisfy her love. Shakespeare brings the thought of Desdemona into the play by Barbantio, her father, “It is too true an evil. Gone she is.\...Oh, she deceives me\ Past thought! …” (1.1.163)(1.1.168-169), whom has just found she has taken off with Othello and firstly suspects they have been hitched. Shakespeare gives reader the
The relationship between Desdemona and Othello in the play ‘Othello’ is used to express and observe the way that humans are selfish by nature. Although both Desdemona and Othello do sincerely love each other, both of them find great personal gain in their marriage, which clearly contributes to their feelings for one another. Othello, who is a black leader in an overwhelmingly white, Christian society, has come from a troubled and difficult background, being “sold to slavery” and working in the military all his life. In finding a good Christian wife in Desdemona, he finds someone to always support him in hard times, as evidenced in his summary of their romance, “she loved me for the dangers I had passed, and I loved her that she did pity them”. This quote suggests that their love is more self-serving than he lets on; Desdemona loves Othello for the adventures he has been on and the stories he tells, and Othello loves Desdemona because she listens and devotes herself to what he has to say. When Desdemona gets a chance to explain their relationship herself, she is particularly proud of the fact that she “did love the Moor to live with him; my downright violence and storms of fortunes may trumpet to the world”. We note that she mentions her ‘violence’, the way she deliberately disobeyed her father and fled his company to secretly marry a man who is not one of her father’s approved suitors. This furthers the idea that Desdemona seems to be in love with Othello because of the adventures he has been on, and the excitement and liberty of her being with such a man; she is seeking her own freedom in a misogynistic society by defying her father to marry Othello. Their relationship is
Othello insults and strikes Desdemona in public and Desdemona being horrified by these actions says that “I have not deserved this” (4.1.241). Desdemona finds Othello to be incorrect in his actions and she expresses her feelings to Othello. This proves Desdemona to be ahead of the time the play was written since unlike other women Desdemona defends herself and her beliefs strongly. Therefore, Desdemona is shown as an all-around powerful woman.
Desdemona is portrayed as a very inquisitive women, whom loves to explore the things and people outside of her class. She fell in love with Othello because of her curious nature and being attracted to his acts of bravado. Her intentions are sincere; however her curiosity in this act is seen as folly. She asks her cousin Lodovico about his arrival and informs him of Cassio’s dismissal. This angers Othello as she is praising another man, taking a persona of being proactive about him. For Othello this concludes that she is disobedient and has dishonored him - to put her in place, he resorts to violence:
She begins the play as a independent and thoughtful person, but she must struggle against all odds to make Othello believe that she is not too independent. Desdemona is a symbol of innocence and helplessness. However in the beginning of the play, she seems to be mature and quite insightful of events around her. Iago often tells Othello that she is unfaithful. It seems that she refuses to accept what Iago is doing. She has a tendency to be sympathetic towards other people's situations, like Cassio. This also further inspired Othello's jealousy when Iago pointed out that Cassio and Desdemona were speaking in private. She often pays attention to other people’s thoughts, yet remains distrustful if they differ from her own. She has a loyalty to her husband in all aspects of life,
"You don't love someone because they're perfect, you love them in spite of the fact that they're not” (Picoult, 384). This quote is the definition of true love, something the two protagonists of this play sadly never had. The tragedy Othello is about a general of the Venetian army, and his beautiful wife Desdemona, whose lives are completely ruined by the deceitful, cunning, and cowardly Iago. One of Iago’s biggest accomplishments was breaking up Othello and Desdemona's relationship by getting it into Othello’s head that Desdemona was cheating on him. This really made the reader question Othello’s feelings towards Desdemona as for someone who claimed to have love Desdemona with a passion, Othello sure was quick to believe Iago’s lies and turn on Desdemona. Based on his actions towards Desdemona, Othello proved that he does not truly love Desdemona because he is insecure, lacks trust, and is a very jealous person.
It is here that the audience begins seeing a different identity of Othello. Who was once regarded as so valiant and courageous, was now beginning to show signs of severe insecurities dealing with matters, most importantly, such as his lack of experience in love and marriage causing shadows of doubt over his confidence in himself and his ability to be loved by and worthy of someone like Desdemona. Desdemona, although not intentionally, seems to be the reason for all the unrest in Othello. This is an instance in the play when irony shines it's smiling face upon Shakespeare's most tragic characters. Othello feels truly happy with the presence of Desdemona in his life (Act II.1, 181-187):
The most influential impact on Othello and Desdemona’s relationship was the differences in race. Differences in races have –and will- impact on relationships for a very long time. Desdemona was fair skinned, as was the rest of her family, and Othello was a dark-skinned Moor. Race discrimination has been an issue for thousands of years, with the common misconception, that ‘whites’ are better then ‘blacks’. Othello and Desdemona put this judgment aside, and fell in love with each other. This, of course, shocked others around them, primarily Desdemona’s father, Brabantio. Brabantio had liked and trusted Othello, before he found out that he was with his daughter. He couldn’t accept them being together, and believed that Othello had put a spell on Desdemona, as ‘black’ people were often presumed to be part takers of witchcraft. Othello also felt threatened by other ‘white’ man around Desdemona, particularly Casio, which made him jump to the conclusion of
Desdemona is shown as the most pure and proper of the women in Othello and is put into the center of all the drama. The men of the play manipulate her image of a naive lover to being a “ ...strumpet!” (V.ii.94). Desdemona is oblivious to what is going on around her and stays loyal to her morals but Iago’s rumours lure Othello to thinking otherwise. Desdemona’s true morals is her absolute devotion to her husband. She stayed loyal to her lover throughout the entire play and in the end it did her no good. “Nobody; I myself. Farewell! Commend me to my kind lord. O, farewell!” Desdemona on her deathbed, still defends her Lord’s actions. She does not fight back nor call for help, Desdemona begs for her life asking to “Kill me (Desdemona) tomorrow; let me live tonight!” (V.ii.97). She is not as strong-willed like the other ladies and is Shakespeare’s example of the archetype of the innocence and has the bases of a flat character. After the
By saying ‘farewell’ Shakespeare has made Desdemona look innocent up until the very last minute, she does not say a harsh word to Othello in hatred of what he has done, she proves her loyalty to him but in the most naïve way, Desdemona could have prevented the upcoming death scene if she had of warned Emilia. Once again, due to Desdemona’s lack of sight and observation she has proven her naivety how incognisant she is throughout the
In Shakespeare’s play “Othello” the main characters Othello and Desdemona suffer a tragic fate due to their actions and unforeseen circumstances. A majority of Desdemona’s suffering is down to Iago’s manipulation. However, it could also be argued that Iago is not completely to blame for the misfortune of Desdemona. We as the readers can see evidence of this at certain points in the play where Iago has planted the seeds of despair and Desdemona and Othello have fallen for his plans. In this essay, I will look at key moments in the play where Desdemona is presented as a tragic victim by the writer and justify why she is a tragic victim using quotes from the play.
In Shakespeare’s play Othello, Desdemona is initially characterized as an independent and strong individual, but develops throughout the play into a subservient and obedient character as she loses sight of her value of autonomy over social expectation. Desdemona’s strength is demonstrated through her desire for adventure and open opposition of male authority figures in the play. When Desdemona is given her first opportunity to speak, she delivers her divided duty speech, wherein she explains to her father that she has an equal obligation to both her father and her new husband. Additionally Desdemona courageously cites her mother’s example as the reason she defends Othello, as her mother “[preferred Barbantio] before her father” as well (1.3.178-186).
If it were simple enough to only say that Othello’s age is a reason for Desdemona’s infidelity then Iago would’ve either strictly stuck to that in his rhetoric or he would’ve made it more of a focal point than Othello’s ethnicity. By getting Othello to hate himself not only for his age but also his ethnicity, Iago is able to further his means of manipulation. Iago gets Othello to not adopt racist values, but instead, self-loathing notions that contribute to a lack of trust in Desdemona, a lack of trust in himself, and ultimately his own demise at the hands of his jealous rage. The master manipulator himself subtly introduces this ideology when he discusses “proposed matches” and describes their nature as having its, “own [similar] clime, complexion, and degree” (3.3.230). The word choice that such a statement contains and the order of these words is unique in the sense that it emphasizes the lack of compatibility between such entwined lovers like Desdemona and Othello.
Looking at the play, all along Desdemona is a very feminine character. She most likely acts like a wife and daughter. So full of cares, Desdemona at a point of the play even neglected her house quarrels and goes out to spare fellings with Cassio to try to help with his situations with Othello. So faithful she was, even when she and Othello were not on the best terms, she was still trying to fixed everything even she knows that she was not cheating, which she explains, " Yes, faith, so humbled that he hath left parts of his grief with me to suffer with him. Good love call him
The good character of Desdemona in William Shakespeare’s tragic drama Othello meets a wretched end because of the sinister treachery of an ancient. In this essay let us analyze the beautiful character of Desdemona.