The plot of
Shakespeare's Othello is largely taken from Giraldi Cinthio's Gli Hecatommithi,
a tale of love, jealousy, and betrayal; however, the characters, themes, and
attitudes of the works are vastly different, with Shakespeare's play being a
more involved study of human nature and psychology. There are, however, a few
deviations from Shakespeare's source, one of which being the motivations of the
Iago figure. Cithio's Iago was driven to revenge when Desdemona refused to have
an affair with him; Iago's motivations are not nearly so plain in Shakespeare's
version.
Othello also
touches upon a major issue in Europe of this time period; the intermingling of
Muslim religion and culture with the West. Written just a century after the
Muslims were driven out of Spain as a part of the Reconquista, there are
obvious threads of hostility within the play about Othello's Moorish origins,
and his differences in religion and culture. The hostility between the West and
the East is also shown in the conflict between Venice and the Turks; the
Christian Venetians want to protect Christendom from the influence of the
Muslim Turks, and ironically, Moorish Othello is the one sent to complete this
mission.
Othello is
considered to be a prime example of Aristotelian drama; it focuses upon a very
small cast of characters, one of the smallest used in Shakespeare, has few
distractions from the main plot arc, and concentrates on just a few themes,
like jealousy. AS such, it is one of the most intense and focused plays
Shakespeare wrote, and has also enjoyed a great amount of popularity from the
Jacobean period to the present day.
The character of
Iago is a variation on the Vice figure found in earlier morality plays; he
deviates from this model because of his lack of a clear motivation, and because
of his portrayal as a very malignant figure. However, Iago is less of a
character than a changeable device for the plot, and in this sense, he is a
clear descendant of the omnipresent "vice" figure. Iago's great
cunning, manipulative abilities, and almost supernatural perception mean that
he is a very formidable foe, and this makes Othello's fall seem even more
inevitable and tragic.
One reason for the
overwhelming popularity of the play throughout the ages is that it focuses on
two people who defied society in order to follow their own hearts. Shakespeare
scholar Walter Cohen cites the popularity of Othello during times of great
rebellion and upheaval; the play was most popular during the European wars of
the mid-19th century, the fall of Czarism Russia, and also during World War II
in America. These productions tended to emphasize the nobility and love of
Othello and Desdemona, and made their fall seem more tragic and ill-deserved.
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