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I'm reading Othello for English Honors, and we have to write an essay on this topic: Explore the character of Desdemona. What does she represent in the play?

I have some ideas, but I don't think that it's enough, so any help would be appreciated. Thank you!

2007-03-20 13:33:22 · 3 answers · asked by Anonymous in Education & Reference Homework Help

I know sparknotes, but it doesn't help, and neither does cliffsnotes or pinkmonkey.

2007-03-21 05:51:12 · update #1

3 answers

i just answerd this to get to level 2
thanks for helping

2007-03-20 13:36:41 · answer #1 · answered by joshua g 3 · 0 2

Desdemona
Desdemona is a more plausible, well-rounded figure than much criticism has given her credit for. Arguments that see Desdemona as stereotypically weak and submissive ignore the conviction and authority of her first speech (“My noble father, / I do perceive here a divided duty” [I.iii.179–180]) and her terse fury after Othello strikes her (“I have not deserved this” [IV.i.236]). Similarly, critics who argue that Desdemona’s slightly bizarre bawdy jesting with Iago in Act II, scene i, is either an interpolation not written by Shakespeare or a mere vulgarity ignore the fact that Desdemona is young, sexual, and recently married. She later displays the same chiding, almost mischievous wit in Act III, scene iii, lines 61–84, when she attempts to persuade Othello to forgive Cassio.
Desdemona is at times a submissive character, most notably in her willingness to take credit for her own murder. In response to Emilia’s question, “O, who hath done this deed?” Desdemona’s final words are, “Nobody, I myself. Farewell. / Commend me to my kind lord. O, farewell” (V.ii.133–134). The play, then, depicts Desdemona contradictorily as a self-effacing, faithful wife and as a bold, independent personality. This contradiction may be intentional, meant to portray the way Desdemona herself feels after defending her choice of marriage to her father in Act I, scene iii, and then almost immediately being put in the position of defending her fidelity to her husband. She begins the play as a supremely independent person, but midway through she must struggle against all odds to convince Othello that she is not too independent. The manner in which Desdemona is murdered—smothered by a pillow in a bed covered in her wedding sheets—is symbolic: she is literally suffocated beneath the demands put on her fidelity. Since her first lines, Desdemona has seemed capable of meeting or even rising above those demands. In the end, Othello stifles the speech that made Desdemona so powerful.

2007-03-20 13:37:25 · answer #2 · answered by Alisha M 2 · 2 0

Sparknotes is the place to find information on classic literature... Alisha gave you a great answer!

2007-03-20 13:50:04 · answer #3 · answered by Cambrianna S 4 · 1 1

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