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Desdemona
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Desdemona is a central character in William Shakespeare's Othello, the Moor of Venice, and she draws sustained academic attention in literature courses focused on Renaissance drama, tragic form, and gender in early modern culture. Students engage with her because she sits at the intersection of several compelling critical problems: the dynamics of marriage and obedience, the construction of female virtue, and the mechanisms by which an innocent figure becomes a victim of jealousy and manipulation. Her relationship to Othello, her defiance of her father, and her loyalty in the face of false accusation make her a richly ambiguous subject for close reading and argument.

Papers on this topic approach Desdemona from several directions. Many analyze her role within the tragedy's structure, examining how Iago's schemes exploit her reputation and her husband's trust to catastrophic effect. Comparative essays set Othello against other works to explore how plot is driven by jealousy or betrayal, while others focus specifically on women's roles in society as Shakespeare dramatizes them. Some papers treat Othello as a tragic hero and position Desdemona as essential to understanding his fall, and historical approaches consider the absence of women performers on the Elizabethan stage to question how femininity was constructed and performed.

A strong essay on Desdemona requires a focused thesis that moves beyond describing her innocence toward arguing what her characterization reveals about power, gender, or tragic form. Textual evidence drawn from her specific speeches and interactions carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating her purely as a passive symbol rather than as a character whose choices and voice actively shape the play's meaning.

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Drives the Narrative of Human Life: Fate
¶ … drives the narrative of human life: Fate or character?
Essay Doctorate
Shakespeare's Othello as Aristotelian Tragedy: An Analysis
Aristotle, in Poetics, presents certain conditions for a Tragedy to be defined as such. Key conditions hinge primarily on certain elements of plot and secondary on certain components of character. Shakespeare's Othello seems to fulfill most of the conditions with the exception that the plot is more complex and circuitous than that demanded by Aristotle's condition of a unified, taut arraigned whole. Nonetheless, Othello's' drop hinges on a peripety moment. We identify with him for his cause-and -effect action was prompted by error, and this makes shim as human as any of us for we perceive the same results as potentially happening to us. Whilst a tragedy in the modern sense, Othello almost succeeds in being a tragedy in the Aristotelian sense, too.
Research Paper Doctorate
Othello Things Fall Apart
Emilia: the wife of Iago. She provides the handkerchief for her husband, unwittingly facilitating Iago's orchestrated revenge upon Othello. However, she sympathizes with Desdemona, regarding all men as savages.
Thesis Undergraduate
Othello Aristotle\'s Poetics Is the Most Informative
Aristotle's Poetics is the most informative piece of work on the nature of art. It is in the Poetics that Aristotle defines the fundamental nature of tragedy. For Aristotle, what defines tragedy (and all art, in…
Paper Masters
The Tragedy of Othello: Passion, Deception, and Self-Destruction
"James Joyce, in a Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man… defines the material of tragedy as 'whatever is grave and constant in human sufferings'," (Campbell, 1991, p. 50). It is the humanity of tragedy which luridly…
Paper Masters
The whens and whys of absent women performers on Elizabethan stages
¶ … saw the birth of a man who would forever be quoted in College assignments: William Shakespeare. Well, that date has been speculated, as "the actual date of Shakespeare's birth is not known, but, traditionally, April…
Paper Masters
Iago in William Shakespeare\'s Play,
¶ … Iago in William Shakespeare's play, Othello, is undoubtedly one of the most conniving characters ever created. Even today, there are few man that can compare with the man who convinced Othello his innocent wife was…
Paper Doctorate
Jealousy in The Cask of Amontillado
"No one attacks me with impunity," is the motto of the Montressor coat of arms -- at least, that is what Montressor, the narrator of "The Cask of Amontillado," confesses to Fortunato.
Paper Undergraduate
Shakespeare's works and literary influence
William Shakespeare has long been considered one of the greatest writers -- perhaps the greatest -- in English or indeed possibly any language. This might seem strange given a cursory examination of his stories --…
Paper Undergraduate
Iago: Superior Craftsman William Shakespeare\'s
William Shakespeare's play, Othello, should be named Iago, after the character that drives the plot and steals the show. Iago is one of Shakespeare's most compelling creations because he is evil.