Title: Lecture 1
1Lecture 1 Othello the Moor of Venice by William
Shakespeare
- World of Othello Othellos World
2Areas of focus
- Introductory remarks, and Conflict
- A different time a different place
- Historical and cultural factors
- A word on Shakespeares Theatre
- Shakespearean Drama
- Shakespearean Tragedy and Tragic Hero
- Literary, linguistic, rhetorical elements
- Key Concepts
3Introduction Note the title
- Othello
- the Moor of Venice
4Introduction (cont)
- To study Shakespeare enables you to acquire all
kinds of knowledge, ideas, insights, skills, and
most of all, wisdom - Increased vocabulary, and use of English
- Enriched historical cross-cultural awareness
and intellectual understanding - Enhanced personal developmentgrowth of self
confidence and self-esteem
5Drama and Conflict
- In Othello, as with any play
- Conflict is the essence of drama.
6Introduction Studying and Enjoying
- Shakespeare wanted his plays to entertain and to
be enjoyed - A play like Othello should be treated as a script
to guide a live performance on stage - For active, imaginative, and co-operative
inhabitation of Shakespeares world - His language is an invitation to imaginative,
dramatic enactment - Play reading visualizing the script of the play
in your mind
7A different time, different place
- Clearly a different world
- The Elizabethan England of Shakespeare
- Distinguishing clearly between Shakespeares
English world and the European world of his play
Othello Venice, the Hollywood of 16th
century West - Venice glamorous, daring, brilliant, wicked
citya city of pearls and perils
8The world of Shakespeare's Othello
- Notice the names of the characters Roderigo
Brabantio Cassio Iago Othello - Clearly, Italian sounding names
- (though name Iago is Spanish for James)
- Venice (Venetian) Florence (Florentine)
- Venicea powerful European city-state
- Important commercial centre and to the whole of
Christendom as a protector of the Christian faith
against Turkey
9The city of Venice
- Venice is the landless city where different kinds
and races meet each other - The sea is the medium of their wars as money is
the medium of their wealth - Venice is for Shakespeare an anthropological
laboratory - suspended between sea and sky, it receives and
utilizes all kinds of people
10This is Venice Brabantio
- Audiences had good reason to see Italy as a
natural background to sensational dramatic events - On the one hand, Italy, and more particularly,
cities like Venice and Florence were centres of
civilization - Earliest home of the European Renaissance
- A model of learning and sophistication
11Moors? and Othello, the Moor
- Issue of Othellos race Arab or Negro?
- Moor (standard definition) a member of the mixed
Arab and Berber people of Morocco (North Africa)
and the Barbary coast - However, evidence for the kind of Moor Othello is
in the play is difficult to interpret - In any case, a dark, or black / white opposition
is built into the play at every level
12Theatre in Shakespeares time
- Shakespeare's theatre did not possess the complex
stage machinery of modern theatre - to create elaborate sets, lighting, and sound
effects - He therefore had to create atmosphere and setting
through language - Scene painting done in words
- Lighting effects achieved through language
13Re- Theatre (cont)
- Fullest experience of any Shakespearean play was
created through words - In Othello, for instance, language is used to
evoke tempests - Language is used to create a sense of place
14Features of Shakespearean Drama
- Every play has its own distinctiveness
- Much of his plays written in poetry verseblank
verse - As well as in prose
- Blank verse is a very flexible medium like
normal English speech, capable of a wide range of
tones Speaking Shakespeare - Iambic pentameterdivide into five feet
15Features of Shakespearean drama (cont)
- High life characters speak in poetry
low life characters speak in prose - Five act plays, divided into scenes
- Soliloquies, Asides, and set speeches
- Long speechesCopia Verborum (abundance,
plentiness of words) - The nature of Shakespeares stage directions
16A sense of Shakespearean Tragedy
- Genre? Kind / type of play Othello is a tragedy
- In Tragedy (tragic drama), there is always a
fall the playwright is concerned with
its causes, the way it works, its effects - Associated with Tragedy is the notion of the
boomerang - The effect of the Tragic Heros actions on
himself totally different effect to that
intended
17The Tragic Hero
- For the tragic hero,
- there is also the concept of the acquisition of
self-knowledge - This refers to the knowledge of himself that
comes to the Tragic Hero through suffering
18In Tragedymust be a Tragic Hero
- Whose situation changes from well-being to
misfortune - Brought upon him by some error of judgment on his
part, arising from a flaw in his character, some
human weakness - Essential he contributes to some extent to his
own downfall - Who must suffer for his wrong-doing on this earth
until he has expiated his offences
19Definition of Tragic Hero
- The Tragic Hero is a potentially noble person
- Who, through some flaw in his character
- Helps to bring about his own downfall, a
- And who by suffering acquires self-knowledge
- And so purges his faults
20Literary elements
- Rich and varied use of poetic imagery
- Symbolism e.g. the tempest
- Personification
- Rhythm e.g. the steady rhythm of Othellos
earlier blank verse - Sound repetition Assonance, Alliteration, and
onomatopoeia Rhyme - Puns The Elizabethans delighted in wordplay
- Dramatic irony Irony of situation irony of
speech -
21Literary elementswe note Iago uses
- bombastic, patterned, balanced language,
abounding in latinisms - when he is speaking to Roderigo
- For example, it was a violent commencement, and
thou shalt see an answerable sequestration
Iago in Act 1, Scene 3, lines 345-346 - Use of patterned dialogue
22Linguistic elements
- Use of pronouns You and Thee
- Shakespeares use of thee, thou, thy, thine
- Thou can imply either closeness or contempt
- You is more formal and distant form of address
suggesting respect for a superior or courtesy to
a social equal - Use of transitive verbs
- Use of aptly chosen adjectives
23Shakespearean / Elizabethan English
- Tush - rubbish Sblood - by Gods blood
- Forsooth
- Hath
- Full hard
- Marry (swears by the Virgin Mary)
- Hotly - urgently
- Moons - months
- Prithee - pray you
- Haply - perhaps
- Note Words that have changed in meaning
24Rhetoric Art of Persuasion
- All the ways of using language to convince
others, or move someone to action - Use of particular linguistic techniques to gain
the confidence of listeners, appeal to their
reason, their emotions, and their imagination - In Othello, as in all plays, powerfully
persuasive voices are heard as characters try to
convince other characters
25Rhetorical techniques / devices
- Lengthy speechescopia verborum
- Bombast (inflated language)
- Powerful antithesis Hyperbole
- All kinds of repetitions, and lists (enumeration)
- Anaphora the same words beginning successive
sentences - Epizeuxis repeating words in immediate
succession - Antanaclasis punning on a repeated word to
obtain different dramatic effects
26Some central Concepts
- Individual Outsider Society Culture
- Conflict Tragedy (Shakespearean Tragedy)
- Tragic hero Concepts of Heaven and Hell
- Concepts of Good, and Evil Love and Hate
- Concepts of Appearance and Reality
- Concept of Belief and Knowledge
- Concept of Cause Reason and Evidence
- Concepts of Order and Chaos
- Concept of Antithesis
27Finally, remember???
- Read the playcarefully and thoroughly
- In reading the play, (may I suggest) you acquire
and use a CD aural dramatization to enable you to
follow and make better sense of the context of
the plays text. - Seek opportunities to see the play in
performance to experience it theatrically - Seize opportunities to read literary criticism
- Seek opportunities to discuss the play