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| When: Due Date: April
19th
What: A five section essay
on: How: Typed, 12 point font, double spaced, header w/page number The paper should be approx. 500 words or about 2 typed pages. Special Instructions: Your essay MUST start off with an anecdote a small story / incident) either directly based on the play, or directly related to an illustration of Othello’s character. |
Use
all the tools you have: common sense and close reading of the play! |
We have read Othello in class. Also easily available to you (if you
want to lay down the big bucks, about $2.98 to rent and $14.00 to own)
is the newest movie version. Using both or either of these, write an
essay answering the following question:
Literature explores what it means to live as a thinking, feeling human being. If we understand how to look at the lives presented in literature (more specifically, what the author is trying to show us about these lives), we are far better equipped to understand our own lives. How do we go about answering this question? I think we should begin with the picture (the image) that Shakespeare is presenting. What he is trying to do is help us understand an abstract concept by making it concrete, by giving us a picture of human beings in action. So view or reread Othello, be entertained by what is going on, experience what Othello is going through, experience the motivations Iago has for wanting to destroy Othello. Focus on the characters -- what's going on inside of them. Now comes the hard part: understanding what Shakespeare is showing us about the way we are. To do this we have to stand back from the experience of the play. We have to try to objectively analyze what the characters say, what truth about human nature makes them do what they do. This process is what gives us insight, which is the whole point of the literary experience, as far as I am concerned. This process is also called understanding the theme (i.e., what the play/story/poem is about). In other words, PLOT leads to àCHARACTER leads to àTHEME. Your essay assignment will illustrate the understanding I ask you to seek from reading and viewing Othello. It's not just about plot, or something like good/evil symbolism, or even Shakespeare's extensive use of metaphor or an image. Just answer the question, "Was Othello a good man?" Here are some hints:
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