Thursday, April 9, 2020
Othello - Analysis Of Iago Essays (548 words) - Othello, Iago
  Othello - Analysis of Iago       Shakespeare's Iago is one of Shakespeare's most complex   villains. At first glance Iago's character seems to be pure evil.  However, such a villain would distract from the impact of the play and   would be trite. Shakespeare to add depth to his villain makes him   amoral, as opposed to the typical immoral villain. Iago's entire   scheme begins when the "ignorant, ill-suited" Cassio is given the   position he desired. Iago is consumed with envy and plots to steal the   position he feels he most justly deserves. Iago deceives, steals, and   kills to gain that position. However, it is not that Iago pushes aside   his conscience to commit these acts, but that he lacks a conscience to   begin with. Iago's amorality can be seen throughout the play and is   demonstrated by his actions.        For someone to constantly lie and deceive one's wife and   friends, one must be extremely evil or, in the case of Iago, amoral.   In every scene in which Iago speaks one can point out his deceptive   manner. Iago tricks Othello into beleiving that his own wife is  having an affair, without any concrete proof. Othello is so caught up   in Iago's lies that he refuses to believe Desdemona when she denies   the whole thing. Much credit must be given to Iago's diabolical   prowess which enables him to bend and twist the supple minds of his   friends and spouse. In today's society Iago would be called a   psychopath without a conscience not the devil incarnate.        Iago also manages to steal from his own friend without the   slightest feeling of guilt. He embezzles the money that Roderigo gives  him to win over Desdemona. When Roderigo discovers that Iago has been   hoarding his money he screams at Iago and threatens him. However, when   Iago tells him some fanciful plot in order to capture Desdemona's   heart Roderigo forgets Iago's theft and agrees to kill Cassio. Iago's   keen intellect is what intrigues the reader most. His ability to say   the right things at the right time is what makes him such a successful   villain. However, someone with a conscience would never be able to   keep up such a ploy and deceive everyone around him. This is why it is   necessary to say that Iago is amoral, because if you don't his  character becomes fictional and hard to believe.        At the climactic ending of the play, Iago's plot is given away   to Othello by his own wife, Emilia. Iago sees his wife as an obstacle   and a nuisance so he kills her. He kills her not as much out of anger   but for pragmatic reasons. Emilia is a stumbling block in front of his   path. She serves no purpose to him anymore and she can now only hurt   his chances of keeping the position he has been given by Othello.   Iago's merciless taking of Emilia's and Roderigo's lives is another   proof of his amorality.        If one looks in modern day cinema, one will see the trite   villain, evil to the core. Shakespeare took his villains to a higher   level. He did not make them transparent like the villains of modern   cinema. He gave his villains depth and spirit. Iago is a perfect  example of "Shakespeare's villain." His amorality and cynicism give,   what would be a very dull character, life.    
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