Manipulation In Othello

Words: 433
Pages: 2

Readers and audiences throughout time has clearly seen the impact made by two of Shakespeare’s famous plays, The Tragedy of Othello, the Moor of Venice and The Tragedy of Hamlet, Prince of Denmark. The characters, plot, emotions, and the overall relatableness of these characters has brought out timeless themes that can be seen throughout stories all over the world. Othello is a story about a Moorish celebrate army general who is named governor of Cyprus after he marries the daughter of a Venetian senator. His subordinate, Iago, manipulates Othello, other characters, and events in the story in order to cause the self destruction of Othello due to vaguely unknown motivations. Hamlet is the story about a prince who finds out from his father’s ghost that he must take revenge because the …show more content…
Manipulation not only keeps audiences interested, but also shows that Shakespeare understood basic human qualities, such as the different emotions, deceit, greed, the mind and the body. This understanding that he has makes the play all the more timeless and well as valuable to society today due to the way that they create several reoccurring themes seen, experienced, or heard from by those of us in the contemporary era.The concept of the plays and their characters are motivated to by all sorts of emotions in which the central villain of these stories have a control over the ending by using skillful manipulation to uproot the flow of peace. Within the time period that Shakespeare composed the plays, the characters within the plays represent people that one can identify with. Female characters like Emilia, Gertrude, Desdemona, and Ophelia were portrayed to be underclass compared to men, even though they may have aspired to be more. Several subordinates such as Horatio is similar to the multiple and trustworthy