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Shakespeare’s Othello – the story of vulnerability of love
Othello by Shakespeare, the play with the strong theme of love
2 commentsJEWELRY FOR THE BOOK LOVERS,WRITERS AND LOVERS
Unique and antique jewellery for the book lovers,lovers and above all for the writers.
14 commentsMy Adventures as an Opera Extra
I've been interested in the performing arts — including opera — for a long time. Opera is the Olympics of singing — once it gets in your blood, you're hooked. I started volunteering as a supernumerary ("extra") for my local opera company. Read about my adventures as an extra in the operas Othello, Aida, and Carmen.
20 commentsDesdemona
I lost all feeling that day, the day of the crash. An airplane had lost air and found earth. Among the dead and dying, I found you. Temptress of fate, in your temple among the carnage, smoking cigarettes, watching the clouds...
8 commentsShakespeare's Attitude Toward Women in "Othello" and What We Can Learn
A quick summary of the play can be found here. Shakespeare was always wary of women and careful to give them respect, which is obvious when reading Othello. The society of Othello is strongly dominated by men who are the political and military...
0 commentsOthello Analysis
Today I will be reciting Act 3 Scene 3 Lines 262 – 281 of the Arden edition of Shakespeare’s Othello. It is on pg. 224 – 225 and is Othello’s first soliloquy in the play. This fellow’s of exceeding honesty And knows all qualities,...
1 commentElizabethan Women in Shakespeare's Othello
Women in an Elizabethan society, such as Shakespeare’s, were usually not seen as equal. Women were often seen as lesser people who need to be taken care of by men. This ideology was perpetuated by both men and women of the time by playing into the...
0 commentsDesdemona: The Role of the Female Character
A brief essay on the role of women in Shakespeare's Othello and Ann-Marie Macdonald's Goodnight Desdemona.
1 commentEyes "turn green" when filled with the feeling of jealousy
Beware, my lord, of jealousy; It is the green-eyed monster which doth mock The meat it feeds on; that cuckold lives in bliss Who, certain of his fate, loves not his wronger; But, O, what damned minutes tells he o'er Who dotes, yet doubts, suspects,...
10 commentsWhat Is A Perfect Shakespearian Villain? Is Iago Shakespeare's Perfect Villain?
What Is A Perfect Shakespearian Villain? Shakespeare incorporates numerous characters with different personalities and motives in his plays, including villains such as Iago and Claudius; in the end poetic justice determines who the perfect villain is.
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