things to know about shakespeare’s othello. what is a villain?

16
Things to Know About Shakespeare’s Othello

Upload: cameron-oliver

Post on 18-Jan-2018

217 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

What is “the Other”?

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Things to Know About Shakespeare’s Othello. What is a villain?

Things to Know

About Shakespeare’s Othello

Page 2: Things to Know About Shakespeare’s Othello. What is a villain?

What is a villain?

Page 3: Things to Know About Shakespeare’s Othello. What is a villain?

What is “the Other”?

Page 4: Things to Know About Shakespeare’s Othello. What is a villain?

Dialectics…

Page 5: Things to Know About Shakespeare’s Othello. What is a villain?

What does “Moor” mean?

Page 6: Things to Know About Shakespeare’s Othello. What is a villain?

The Ottoman Empire

Page 7: Things to Know About Shakespeare’s Othello. What is a villain?
Page 8: Things to Know About Shakespeare’s Othello. What is a villain?

The Fall of Constantinople (1453)

Page 9: Things to Know About Shakespeare’s Othello. What is a villain?

What was Venice?

Page 10: Things to Know About Shakespeare’s Othello. What is a villain?

Pretty pictures for you!

Page 11: Things to Know About Shakespeare’s Othello. What is a villain?

More Venice…

Page 12: Things to Know About Shakespeare’s Othello. What is a villain?
Page 13: Things to Know About Shakespeare’s Othello. What is a villain?

Venetian Masks

Page 14: Things to Know About Shakespeare’s Othello. What is a villain?

Original Doge

Page 15: Things to Know About Shakespeare’s Othello. What is a villain?

Cyprus

Page 16: Things to Know About Shakespeare’s Othello. What is a villain?

So, overall:

– Moors: Would have held an exotic appeal and excited a certain fear in the London audience.

– Ottoman Empire: a force that pushed Islam into the European sphere and caused fear to arise in some Londoners

– Venice: Land of the rich and the wily. Machiavelli’s The Prince would come to mind, as would Shakespeare’s previous play, The Merchant of Venice and its Jewish character, Shylock.

– Both the Moors and the Venetians would hold a bit of the appeal/fear of alterity for the London audience.