Å·±¦ÓéÀÖ

Bill Kerwin's Reviews > Othello

Othello by William Shakespeare
Rate this book
Clear rating

by
83582
's review

it was amazing
bookshelves: 16th-17th-c-brit
Read 2 times. Last read July 23, 2011.


I have always admired this play as Shakespeare's most theatrical tragedy, but I also feel that it often veers too close to melodrama. Shaw remarked that Othello is written "in the style of Italian opera," and it shares with Verdi and Donizetti the same big emotions, the same clear demarcation of good and evil, that give Lucia and Trovatore their emotional intensity--and their lack of essential seriousness too. During this reading, however, I began to realize that Othello is much more than the greatest of melodramas, and that the key to appreciating its depth lies in the concept of the public mask.

Othello is a man who always wears a mask in public: the mask of the thoroughly professional military leader who is far too noble to be moved by emotions which might cause others to be petty or untrustworthy. Iago wears a similar mask: the mask of the thoroughly professional military subordinate who is frank and blunt and incapable of dishonesty.

Othello's mask hides a snake's nest of fears, fears bred from the insecurity of being a black man in an alien white society. Iago's mask hides the fact that he is a sociopath motivated by jealousy and rage.

Othello cannot see the reality of the evil beneath a mask that in some ways is similar to his own, and instead misinterprets each frank gesture of his devoted wife as proof of the diabolical mask of an accomplished adulteress. This is Othello's fatal error, and Desdemona--and Othello himself--pay dearly for it.
367 likes ·  âˆ� flag

Sign into Å·±¦ÓéÀÖ to see if any of your friends have read Othello.
Sign In »

Reading Progress

Finished Reading (Paperback Edition)
May 12, 2007 – Shelved
October 15, 2007 – Shelved (Paperback Edition)
Started Reading
July 23, 2011 – Finished Reading
July 26, 2011 – Shelved as: 16th-17th-c-brit

Comments Showing 1-9 of 9 (9 new)

dateDown arrow    newest »

message 1: by Paula Tohline (new)

Paula Tohline Calhoun I know that ol' Will is gratified, and is clapping with delight in his grave for those 5 stars.

(Sorry, I just couldn't resist! :wink:


Bill Kerwin Perhaps now he'll forgive the two stars I gave to "King John."

Zen Koan: what is the sound of two skeleton hands clapping?


message 3: by Paula Tohline (last edited Aug 28, 2011 04:43PM) (new)

Paula Tohline Calhoun You gave him TWO for King John? He must be amazed at that and gratified, considering he was asleep while writing most of it. He then slept through the whole first performance. He was tired. I think he wrote it that way on purpose. If he did - perhaps he feels it is worthy of 5 stars. He accomplished what he wanted.

It only takes one skeleton hand clapping to make a sound. One hand rattles around enough just moving at all.


message 4: by MK (new)

MK That's a really great insight. I hadn't thought of the masks people wear (and Desdemona's refusal to wear one) as the core of the tragedy but it makes a huge amount of sense. Thanks!


Bill Kerwin MK wrote: "That's a really great insight. I hadn't thought of the masks people wear (and Desdemona's refusal to wear one) as the core of the tragedy but it makes a huge amount of sense. Thanks!"

You're welcome! Glad you liked the mask idea. It helped me appreciate the play even more.


Robin I love your breakdown of Othello. Well done. Thank you!


message 7: by Lealdo (new) - added it

Lealdo Brief and fantastic analysis you've made.


Camille I agree with you ALMOST entirely. I agree that Othello wears a mask, but it’s one of military excellence and security; not someone unmoved by emotions. In fact, it’s his emotive and honest declaration of his love to Desdemona that saves him in the start as her father accuses him of witchcraft. He explicitly explains that her pity, her kindness with his vulnerability is what caused him to love her. Had his mask been someone unmoved, he wouldn’t so openly admit that, and perhaps Iago would’ve gone about his plan very differently. Iago prays on Othello’s emotion, he sees a tender and loyal heart which influences Iago’s every move.

I’d say his mask more serves to protect his deep deep racial insecurity. But yeah, great insight overall


Trevor I love this idea of masks. It reminds me of Brutus in Julius Caesar, who wore the "mask" of Caesar's beloved friend (He actually was, until the night he joined the murder conspiracy). I think this is an intentional thing Shakespeare used. With the idea of duality in human character or something of the sort.


back to top