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Feminism in Othello

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Women’s Roles in Othello Shakespearean England was a thoroughly patriarchal society, with very few rights for women. This culture was borne of the perspective that women were of a lower worth in society than men, a view reflected in the treatment of the majority of women by the men in their lives. William Shakespeare wrote many plays about social issues across Europe, and his play Othello was especially focused on the mistreatment of women in England. Though Desdemona and Emilia, the two main female figures in Othello, have horrific deaths, they advance the feminist cause by denying the female stereotypes set by their male counterparts. In Shakespeare’s time, men had particular views on women and Shakespeare shows these views through …show more content…

This is a scene of Desdemona’s last defiance, her braking “through the code of silence expected of the dead as of women”, “destabilizing the master narrative”, and forcing Othello to admit to the crime, “undoing himself in order to undo her” (1I). Desdemona is fully in control of herself and her reputation to the very end, even as her world crumbles around her, manipulating the men and refusing to mold to fit their beliefs. Desdemona is not the only objectified woman in Othello who breaks out of her man-made box. Emilia, Desdemona’s best friend, could be viewed as “more human” than Desdemona because she is less perfect, but she seems to be the Themis of Othello, managing to balance the scales of men and women while bringing justice to the play. Emilia shows the “common, flawed humanity of men and women”, bringing equality to the genders while at the same time mediating the characters and the audience by “voicing its ordinary spontaneous ‘low’ reactions to the… major characters”. She is “not too scrupulous to pilfer the handkerchief, not too pure to use the word ‘whore’… yet it should be noted that in these faults she is in a twisted way considering her husband’s welfare”, balancing good

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