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Manipulation in Othello and Dr. Faustus

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The art of deception The art of deception many times changes the current conditions or plays a significant role in the end result of literary works. In Othello and The Tragical History of
Dr. Faustus shows how deception changes the identity of individuals and the outcome of certain events. There is a juxtaposition between the characters of Iago and Faustus, whom use their human autonomy to manipulate the sequence of events in each work. By deceiving themselves or the characters around them there becomes an absolute play on words and actions, wherein the identity and outcome is strengthened or lost. Iago wishes to be Othello and this becomes apparent in his discussion regarding
Cassio promotion, his social status, and his own identity. …show more content…

But words are words, I never yet did hear. That the bruised heart was pierced through the ear"(line 219-22). Brabantio believes it was not heresy that effected his heart, it was the mere action of her marrying this man that made him upset. It was deception and a play on words that gives her father notions that Othello was not suitable for her daughter. Iago's desire to be Othello and revenge him becomes very apparent, yet he believes he has a solid claim to his words, actions, and thoughts. At the close of Scene 3, Iago is trying to show Roderigo that people make themselves what they are and this all depends on the person's will. Iago actually believes he has a control on his will and states: "Our bodies are our gardens, to which our wills are the gardeners," which relates to his appetite for identity (line 316-17). Greenblatt states: "Confident in his shaping power, Iago has the role-player's ability to imagine his nonexistence so that the can exist for a moment in another as another" (235). In the second act the audience can see more deceptive measures on the part of
Iago, which gave further grief to the other characters within this work. Iago convinces
Roderigo that Desdemona actually loves Cassio. His claims are because he hates Cassio and wants to further the emotional turmoil he has put on Othello. Greenblatt discusses the reasoning for this and states: "He has no evidence, of course-indeed we have earlier seen him "engender" the whole plot entirely out of

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