Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Postcolonial Othering in William Shakespeare’s Play Othello; The Moor of Venice
View through CrossRef
The term postcolonial appeared for the first time in the mid-1980s, in the scholarly journals as subtexts in the writings of Ashcroft, Griffiths, and Tiffin. The term was later established in academic and popular discourse. Its thematic concerns include universality, differences, nationalism, postmodernism, representation and resistance, ethnicity, feminism, language, education, history, place, and production (Ashcroft, Griffiths & Tiffin, 2004.Key Concepts in Postcolonial Studies, p.2). It is the literature that has been created as a voice to the powerless and the poorest members of the global community. “Postcolonial theory deals with the reading and writing of literature written in previously or currently colonized countries; a literature written in colonizing countries which deals with colonization or colonized peoples. It focuses particularly on: the way in which literature by the colonizing culture distorts the experience and realities, and inscribes the inferiority, of the colonized people and on literature by colonized peoples which attempts to articulate their identity and reclaim their past in the face of inevitable Otherness”. (www.shs.westport.k12.ct.us). This paper will be analyzing the text of the play Othello; The Moor of Venice by Shakespeare in terms of the representation of Otherness through the lens of postcolonialism. The love story between Desdemona and Othello was doomed due to the inflexibility of racial politics, the psychology of bodily humours, magic, or the incompatibility of military and private life. Throughout the play, there is the subtle suggestion that Othello, despite his high status, is considered dangerous by his European contemporaries. Brabantio is scandalized when he learns of Othello's relationship with Desdemona, and this revelation almost leads to Othello's arrest and accusations that Othello has kidnapped or stolen his future wife. It's as if the citizens of Venice can't imagine a white woman would have a consensual relationship with a black man, or as if Othello's race poses a threat to the European familial order. Othello continuously subverts this perception, comporting himself with dignity despite European mistrust.
Lahore Garrison University
Title: Postcolonial Othering in William Shakespeare’s Play Othello; The Moor of Venice
Description:
The term postcolonial appeared for the first time in the mid-1980s, in the scholarly journals as subtexts in the writings of Ashcroft, Griffiths, and Tiffin.
The term was later established in academic and popular discourse.
Its thematic concerns include universality, differences, nationalism, postmodernism, representation and resistance, ethnicity, feminism, language, education, history, place, and production (Ashcroft, Griffiths & Tiffin, 2004.
Key Concepts in Postcolonial Studies, p.
2).
It is the literature that has been created as a voice to the powerless and the poorest members of the global community.
“Postcolonial theory deals with the reading and writing of literature written in previously or currently colonized countries; a literature written in colonizing countries which deals with colonization or colonized peoples.
It focuses particularly on: the way in which literature by the colonizing culture distorts the experience and realities, and inscribes the inferiority, of the colonized people and on literature by colonized peoples which attempts to articulate their identity and reclaim their past in the face of inevitable Otherness”.
(www.
shs.
westport.
k12.
ct.
us).
This paper will be analyzing the text of the play Othello; The Moor of Venice by Shakespeare in terms of the representation of Otherness through the lens of postcolonialism.
The love story between Desdemona and Othello was doomed due to the inflexibility of racial politics, the psychology of bodily humours, magic, or the incompatibility of military and private life.
Throughout the play, there is the subtle suggestion that Othello, despite his high status, is considered dangerous by his European contemporaries.
Brabantio is scandalized when he learns of Othello's relationship with Desdemona, and this revelation almost leads to Othello's arrest and accusations that Othello has kidnapped or stolen his future wife.
It's as if the citizens of Venice can't imagine a white woman would have a consensual relationship with a black man, or as if Othello's race poses a threat to the European familial order.
Othello continuously subverts this perception, comporting himself with dignity despite European mistrust.
Related Results
Reanimating Shakespeare's Othello in Post-Racial America
Reanimating Shakespeare's Othello in Post-Racial America
At the close of Shakespeare’s play, Othello supplicates, “Speak of me as I am,” as Venetians congregate and pass judgment, subsequently pleading that they “nothing extenuate,” leav...
The Emblematic Handkerchief in Othello, and Its Untold Backstory
The Emblematic Handkerchief in Othello, and Its Untold Backstory
ABSTRACT: Early modern emblems intentionally performed aspects of one’s character that elicited curiosity while conveying secret messages, often amorous and at times shared by love...
Othello : white skin, black masks
Othello : white skin, black masks
Othello’s race, Desdemona’s perfect purity, and Iago’s motives have long occupied critics of the play. For Coleridge, the survival of lago confirmed his belief that Shakespeare’s c...
Jealousy and Destruction in William Shakespear's Othello
Jealousy and Destruction in William Shakespear's Othello
Othello is honest. He wants to establish an order and peace in the society. He falls in love with a white lady, Desdemona. Despite the discontentment of Desdemona’s father Brobanti...
Otherness/Othering
Otherness/Othering
Othering can be understood as the multidimensional process of constructing and (re)producing the Other as inferior from a hegemonic position that determines which are the epistemol...
Exploring the grammar of othering and antagonism as enacted in terrorist discourse: verbal aggression in service of radicalisation
Exploring the grammar of othering and antagonism as enacted in terrorist discourse: verbal aggression in service of radicalisation
AbstractThe social, discursive practice of othering in violent extremist discourse serves to present outgroups as distant yet real threats to the ideological and physical territori...
A Recipe for "Blackened 'Other'"
A Recipe for "Blackened 'Other'"
When you sit down to eat your delicious meal, it's better that you don't know that most of what you are eating came off a plane from Miami. And before it got on a plane in Miami, w...
“No tools with which to hear”: Adaptive Re-Vision, Audience Education, and American Moor
“No tools with which to hear”: Adaptive Re-Vision, Audience Education, and American Moor
Chapter 4 explores Keith Hamilton Cobb’s play American Moor (2012) and its confrontation of how the white gaze stereotypes and therefore delimits Black masculinity’s relationship t...

