Othello Women Essay

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    placed on Women in Othello Throughout history, women have been oppressed by a patriarchal society that favours men.. This is seen within William Shakespeare's play, Othello, exhibited through Emilia, Bianca, and Desdemona. Shakespeare displays this unjust treatment by showing how women are portrayed as possessions, the double standard for men and women, and how men determine how their counterparts are received. In Othello, women are  regarded as possessions. Desdemona tends to do as Othello tells her

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    play, the female characters in Othello are objectified and belittled by their men. Desdemona, as Othello's wife, is treated as his possession. When Othello leaves for Cyprus he is wished by a senator to "use Desdemona well" (1.3.288). This phrase supports the expectation of Venetian women - that they are to bow to their husbands who may utilize them as they wish. Women in marriage typically functioned as a medium for men to satisfy themselves, as evident when Othello describes his marriage to Desdemona

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    Othello is a famous tragedy, by William Shakespeare. The play takes place in Venice in the sixteenth century. This play is about jealousy and betray. The sad ending is caused by Iago’s deception which he incites Othello to kill Casio and Desdemona. During this time, women is oppressed by men and the society, which is not demonstrated in the play directly, but Shakespeare implicitly raises the concept of feminism with three female characters, Desdemona, Emilia and Bianca; besides, Shakespeare also

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    Essay on Role of Women in Othello

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    Role of Women in Othello         In William Shakespeare’s tragic drama Othello, the wife of the protagonist, Desdemona, is the main female character. Secondly, there is the ancient’s wife, Emilia, who is morally ambivalent. Thirdly, there is the girlfriend of Michael Cassio, Bianca, who makes her appearance later in the drama. This essay will analyze the roles of these three women.   At the outset of the play Iago persuades the rejected suitor of Desdemona, Roderigo, to accompany him

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    In William Shakespeare’s play Othello, there are two main female characters, Desdemona, who is the wife of Othello, and Emilia, the wife of Othello long friend Iago. Some of the women characteristics are very similar to one another but when some events arose throughout the play you could see a sharp contracts in regards to their experience and innocence. Both are strong women whom personalities and demeanors feed off of their lover’s position in power. Desdemona and Emilia both have some interesting

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    Mean Women In Othello

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    Othello: The Original Mean Girls Othello, by William Shakespeare, tells the story of a black war general from Venice named Othello, and his beloved wife Desdemona. Othello promotes Cassio, a friend to Othello and a soldier in his army, to the secondary position in the army when a war with the Turks looms over Venice. When Iago, a highly respected soldier in Othello’s army, learns of Cassio’s promotion, he grows resentful of Cassio, believing that he should have been moved in the ranks. In his jealousy

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    start to tease Emilia about being a chatterbox, while being playful with Emilia Iago quickly takes this opportunity to start criticizing women in general as being deceptive and hypocritical as he can. He starts saying that they are lazy in all matters except sex we can see this when he says “You rise to play and go to bed to work”. What this means is that he sees women as sex subjects that can only do one thing and that is to give pleasure to their men. Desdemona tries to help Emilia from her husband’s

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    Prejudice, especially against women, is something that has been prominent in society for many years. There have been jokes making fun of almost anything a woman does. The prejudice has been happening for so long that even the current American president can still seem presidential, even after the demeaning things he has said about many groups of people. However, it can be easily said that because of the things the President has said, he lost the support of those. Without their support, the country

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    family, wealth, and protection from a male. And to fulfil this, women needed to be continuously sexually attractive yet pure and modest. Once married, it was self-evident that wives should follow their husbands and be humoured by them in return. After a wife had provided an heir, she was truly secure. This can be reflected in Iago’s cynical comment ‘She never yet was foolish that was fair, for even her folly helped her to an heir’ (Othello: Act 2. Sc. 1. 7). In modern-day terms, he is saying that no

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    Women are looked over in Othello but end up being the downfall of their male counterparts; It was Desdemona that was Othello’s greatest weakness and Emilia was Iago’s. This is alluding to Shakespeare being incredibly progressive in a time where women were widely renowned as objects of men. By analyzing and comparing aspects of both Emilia and Desdemona in the William Shakespeare play Othello This is illustrated in Othello by comparing the difference in the opinions between Emilia’s and Desdemona’s

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