Tuesday, March 19, 2019
Shakespeares Othello - Iago as Good Strategician and Lucky Opportunist
Iago - Good Strategician and Lucky Opportunist Like with many wrong personalities in history and literature the question is always asked did he real plan to process this happen or was it just luck and commodious mass, was it intentional or just circumstantial. To determine how good Iago really is at plotting and whether it is really his own influence or just lucky circumstances that cause events I will examine his asides, soliloquies and interaction with key characters because they go through an extra insight into his character. In the first scene we are throw right into the action with the argument between Iago and Roderigo. This first argument shows us how Iago is cunning and sly because he has already manipulated a weak Roderigo into paying him for something he hasnt even done yet. Roderigo who is obviously weak and simple has asked Iago to athletic supporter him woo Desdemona in exchange for coin, he thinks Iago has not done this because Desdemona is in a flash at this moment marrying the moor. Yet Iago manages to convince Roderigo of his sheer hatred for Othello and duplicity him out of his money. As he later exerts in his soliloquy at the end of Act I.3 thus do I ever make my fool my purse this shows his attitude to Roderigo he is just money for Iago a legal instrument in his plan. This attitude shows how to a certain extent Iago primes the character he will use later in his plan showing a consistent strategy, he knows he can use Roderigo in the future(a) so keeps him on his side instead of being rude and groovy with him. You can see that Iago finds Roderigo tedious but keeps him a friend for his money and possible use in the future. As he goes on to blab out he shows his jealousy and frustration, which ... ... still no closer to finding out. as well with Iago there is no doubt that he is intelligent and quick-witted and his freshness and jealousy fuels his plans but to an extent the circumstances played as gigantic a role as the character. Shakespeare created Iago and the circumstances because they reacted well together and do an interesting and exciting plot. So I believe it is fair to assure that Iago, as a character is both a good strategician and a lucky opportunist in equal measures. Works Consulted Muir, Kenneth. Introduction. William Shakespeare Othello. New York Penguin Books, 1968. Shakespeare, William. The tragedy of Othello the Moor of Venice The Norton Shakespeare. Ed. Stanley Wells & Gary Taylor. New York/London, W.W. Norton Company,1997. 2100-2174 Wain, John. Shakespeares Othello - A Casebook. London MacMillan Press. 1994
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