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well i know that this takes place after Othello, the Duke and Brabantio discuss the marrage between Desdemona and Othello, right after everyone in the room had left all except for Roderigo and Iago and In case anyone else didn't know this novel is really a play written by William Shakesphere
There are a lot of themes in Othello, such as revenge, duality, jealousy, etc.
Othello is obsessed with Desdamona, making it easy for Iago to use him and make him believe anything. Iago is obsessed with his revenge for not being promoted. He wants to get revenge on Cassio and Othello for making him look like a fool.
The are many which all the characters face. The main one's for Othello, who is a fool for passion, include's, love, revenge, and a fight with one's conscience.
The main conflict is the internal one within Othello, between his love of Desdemona and his fear that Iago is right about her being an adultress.
well i know that this takes place after Othello, the Duke and Brabantio discuss the marrage between Desdemona and Othello, right after everyone in the room had left all except for Roderigo and Iago and In case anyone else didn't know this novel is really a play written by William Shakesphere
There are a lot of themes in Othello, such as revenge, duality, jealousy, etc.
Othello is obsessed with Desdamona, making it easy for Iago to use him and make him believe anything. Iago is obsessed with his revenge for not being promoted. He wants to get revenge on Cassio and Othello for making him look like a fool.
Othello is jealous because he thinks Desdemona has betrayed him and she has gone after Cassio so, he takes revenge by asking Iago to kill Cassio and he suffocates Desdemona to her death. Use quotes from Othello to prove this point e.g. when Othello starts talking about death.
Iago is using Othello in the play as a tool to enact his revenge and achieve his own selfish desires. He manipulates Othello's trust and insecurities to sow discord and jealousy, ultimately leading to tragic consequences for all involved.
In the play Othello, many of the characters fall victim to jealousy, causing them to do things they wouldn't normally do. Iago, Emilia, Bianca, Roderigo and Othello all display jealousy throughout the play, though each finds resolution in a different way. Iago displays jealousy from the very beginning of the play. His jealousy quickly spawns thoughts of revenge, and he soon develops a plan to achieve revenge on those he feels have wronged him. From the start of the play, Iago expresses his jealousy of both Cassio and Othello. He is jealous of Cassio for securing the job of lieutenant Iago feels he deserved, and jealous of Othello not only from the promotion of Cassio, but also from his belief that Othello has slept with Emilia. Iago expresses "It is thought abroad that 'twixt my sheets / He has done my office" This insecurity and jealousy he feels leads him to commit acts of revenge. As he becomes fixed on the idea of revenge, Iago speaks in a soliloquy he will not be satisfied "Till I am evend with him, wife for wife, /Or failing so, yet that I put the Moor / At least into a jealousy so strong / That judgment cannot cure"
Iago's plan in Shakespeare's "Othello" was to manipulate Othello into believing that his wife, Desdemona, was unfaithful in order to seek revenge on Othello for promoting Cassio over him. He wanted to destroy Othello's happiness and reputation.
A Marriage for Revenge - 1916 was released on: USA: 26 August 1916
The are many which all the characters face. The main one's for Othello, who is a fool for passion, include's, love, revenge, and a fight with one's conscience.
The main conflict is the internal one within Othello, between his love of Desdemona and his fear that Iago is right about her being an adultress.
No. It is a tragedy all right, but that is not a theme. Nor is revenge an issue. At one point Iago suggests that he is seeking revenge for something someone once told him that he thought Othello had done, but that is a pretty lame motive, and Iago keeps changing his story as to why he hates the Moor. No, the themes of this play include love, jealousy, credibility, manipulation, race relations, and justice.
It's a hyperbole.