Othello As Tragedy
Some Problems of Judgement and Feeling
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:30th Oct '80
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Jane Adamson analyses Othello and assesses the title character's complex tragedy.
Jane Adamson considers in detail Othello and explores the ways the play continually undercuts easy moral simplifications as well as the moral questions raised in other characters. This study also illuminates Shakespeare and especially his insight into the need for love, and the dangers that are inseparable from that need.Critical views of Othello have polarized during the last forty years. The dispute is between those who follow Coleridge and Bradley and see Othello as noble but diabolically misled, and those who follow Eliot and Leavis and see him as a criminal egotist. Jane Adamson argues that both views are too simple and that both deprive the play of tragic point. She is concerned to reinstate the play as a great tragedy, and Othello as a complex tragic figure. She considers in detail how the drama unfolds; how Othello's predicament provides a focus for moral questions raised in all the other characters; how the reader or spectator becomes painfully involved with similar questions in trying to understand the action; and how in these ways the play continually undercuts easy moral simplifications. During this study a great deal else in Shakespeare is illuminated - especially his insight into the need for love, and the dangers that are inseparable from that need.
ISBN: 9780521297608
Dimensions: 217mm x 138mm x 19mm
Weight: 415g
312 pages