Othello is Shakespeare’s most complete tragedy. It is filled, in my opinion, with some of the strongest characters in all of Shakespeare’s plays. Othello, the play’s main character, is a cultured Moor, nevertheless insecure and hiding behind a facade of Venetian values and customs. He manages to assimilate into Western European society by denying his background and winning the hearts of the masses (and their daughters) with his tales of victory and strife. He is even appointed as General of the Army, the pinnacle of respectability, as he is a skilled soldier and the Venetians are in dire need of his assistance. However, this facade proves to be weak as his insecurities and trusting nature turn into internal conflict after his only “friend,” Iago, who is jealous of not being chosen as Othello’s lieutenant, dupes him into believing that Desdemona, Othello’s wife and reason for living, is unchaste.
Jealousy overcomes Othello, intensifying his internal strife, and, transforming him from a confident, trusting general, into a devilish murderer. Although Othello seeks to avoid being a victim of what he perceives as his own differences, he, in fact, becomes the classic tragic hero who is destroyed by his own hand. Othello’s positive qualities seem to work against him. An important example of this is his open and trusting nature, so tragically taken advantage of by Iago.
Othello seems to believe that each and every individual is honest and sincere. This openhearted love of his fellow man makes Othello an attractive friend. However, it leaves him open to Iago’s scheming; Iago knows his plan will work because Othello trusts him and has no reason to suspect that he would scheme against him. Iago uses this trust to convince him that Desdemona, Othello’s beloved wife, is unchaste and Michael Cassio is untrue. Othello also is totally na ve in his understanding of the opposite sex. He says, “For since these arms o mine had seven years’ pith Tiff now some nine moons wasted, they have used Their dearest action in the tented field” (I, iii, 83-86).
Having spent most of his life in army camps, Othello knows little of women and the art of loving. This naivete proves charming in the first act, where the strong and powerful general admits to being shy and cautious in love. In the third act, however, the charm fades, as Othello’s inexperience allows Iago to convince him that he doesn’t understand Venetian women; that they are known for cheating on their husbands. Shakespeare’s Othello portrays how jealousy, particularly that of a sexual nature, is one of the most beguiling and destructive of emotions. It is jealousy that prompts Iago to plot Othello’s downfall, as Othello has, supposedly, “done [his] business between the sheets.” In addition, the fact that Othello has chosen Michael Cassio, another foreigner, to be his Lieutenant, feeds Iago’s evil nature.
Jealousy, too, is the tool that Iago uses to arouse Othello’s passions. However, it is clear that Othello was not a jealous individual until Iago played upon his insecurities and brought out Othello’s darkest instincts. “Think ” st thou I’d make a life of jealousy, To follow still the changes of the moon With fresh suspicions No!” (III, iii, 177-179) It is only after Iago executes his plan that Othello becomes the insanely jealous husband who brings about his and Desdemona’s demise. Jealousy is similar to loneliness, in that it is an emotion that all humans share; therefore, we watch its destructive influence on Othello with sympathy and horror. There are no individuals who, at least once in their lives, have not experienced being alienated or despaired at not fitting in. Shakespeare skillfully arouses this universal emotion by making his hero an outsider, one who does not quite belong in the society in which he lives.
He is from another race and another land. Right from the start, Othello appears to be a victim of prejudice, held in suspicion by a man who accuses him of seducing his daughter with sorcery and charms. Taken together, whether it is the color of his skin, his foreign birth, or, the cloud of suspicion he lives beneath, Shakespeare has cast the character of Othello clearly apart from everyone else. Iago takes advantage of Othello’s alienation by using it as proof that Desdemona could not be faithful to a man so foreign; such a match is “unnatural,” he says.
It seems almost too easy for Iago to convince Othello that he is inferior to the men of Venice, being that Othello’s self-confidence was, once, so strong. Shakespeare portrays, through Othello, the tragedy of a man whose sensitivity and insecurities about his background, fed by the opinions of others, weaken his defenses and bring forth his worst instincts. As an officer in the military, the Moor has earned a strong reputation for being a skillful soldier. The discipline he learns and the restraint he exercises gains him the respect of the Venetians, who are in dire need of his tactical assistance. As a by-product of his military background, Othello has developed a strict code of honor that is the foundation of his character and dictates his actions. When he fires Cassio for his participation in a drunken brawl, it is to make an example of him to the rest of the soldiers.
Moreover, he refuses to reinstate him as a matter of principle. Unfortunately, it is his emotional conflict with this rigid code of honor that evolves into his desire for murder. When a man’s honor is lost, according to this code, he must win it back. For Othello, who firmly believes that Desdemona in unchaste, her death is an act of justice, not of vengeance. Regardless of grief, choice is not an issue.
The rules have been carved in stone; as a soldier, he cannot deviate. He is a soldier who accepts the taking of life as ethical, structure of his code of honor. The conflict between Othello’s soldier’s code and the higher ethic of not taking life is an important sidebar of the play. Like Shakespeare’s other notable tragic hero, such as Hamlet, Othello is driven to ruin not by external forces, but, by the insufficiency of his own character. Hamlet is something close to a manic-depressive whose melancholy moods deepen into self-contempt. The universality of Othello is that the theme of the victim of prejudice having the choice of fueling his own oppression has meaning today from the Holocaust to the marches of Martin Luther King.
W. E. B. Dubois described the black man as one constantly trying “to merge his double self into a better and truer self.” He wishes that it were possible to be both a “Negro and an American,” not a victim of the black man’s roots, but, rather, a wiser and more compassionate being. Othello, on the other hand, fails to merge his two selves into a better being, a “better and truer self,” and seeds his own destruction. Othello is a Moor, a black man from a foreign land.
But, Othello is more than a man of a different color. Everything about him is different, whether his speech, his military bearing, or, his social conduct. Shakespeare builds the initial impression that Othello’s difference could, possibly, make him a better man, one to be revered. What happens, in fact, is the opposite, the tragedy. His tactical knowledge could save the day on the battlefield, but his code of honor costs him his wife.
He has a mastery of the English language that should help him command respect and communicate better, but it ends up alienating him further. Everything that should have been good and true for Othello turned out perverse. Othello fails to take advantage of his good fortune and merge his two selves into a “truer and better self”; on the cusp of being a hero to his people, and of nurturing his cherished love, Othello succumbs to prejudice, but the true evil is within. 327.