Your Status: Logged out Log in

I am now going to weigh this against the case that Othello is a character displaying all the classic traits of a tragic hero  

Member rating: No Rating | Words: | Submitted: Tue Nov 15 2005

Page Preview
Preview
Previous 1 of 1 Next

On the left is an image preview of every page of this document, and below are the first 150 words with formatting removed:

Is Othello a Tragic Play? Othello is a character displaying all the classic traits of a tragic hero. Linguistically he is eloquent in style; "Rude am I in my speech and little blessed with the soft phrase of speech" (1.3.82-3). This also implies his modest side although he generally acts as an epic hero as opposed to a Christian leader and this too is reflected in his highly courageous and endearingly care-free speech: "he that stir next, to carve for his own rage, holds his soul light: he dies upon his motion" (2.3.169-170). His peers also recognize him as heroic; Montano calls him 'brave Othello' (2.1.37) and a 'worthy governor' (2.1.30). This case relies on the assumption of Iago's completely evil nature and indeed he is generally scene as one of Shakespeare's most despicable characters. He has a multitude of motives. Resentment and jealously of Cassio's promotion: he wishes 'to get...

Get instant access



  • Instant, unlimited access to our documents in full
  • Swap your work for free access, or pay £4.99
  • To see the full version of this document and 151,784 others
Register Now