Explain how you think Act 3 affects the audience(TM)s feelings about Othello.

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Explain how you think Act 3 affects the audience’s feelings about Othello. You might consider:

  • Whether you see him as a victim of Iago or not
  • His change from loving to loathing
  • Your response to his language
  • His plans for Desdemona and Cassio

Act III is a highly significant scene among all of those in the play of Othello. Act III moves the play along and heightens the intensity, drama and tension between the characters. The plot of the play pans out as the act provides the audience with a skeleton of the time frame in the play; and hence a great sense of urgency. In my own opinion, I feel that the later two scenes (scene three and four) are the most capable of tracking the audience’s feelings about Othello.

 

Scene three is one of the longest scenes, consisting of 480 lines and entrances and exits. Shakespeare has to keep up the relentless pace to remove opportunity for questions to creep into Othello’s mind. Othello can be seen as a victim of Iago in this scene, and evidently it is widely referred to as the ‘temptation’ scene. The scenes previous to this are almost engulfed with conversation in which Iago manipulates Othello and aggravates him by speaking of something which only Iago knows. Othello’s short fuse almost reaches it’s end in scene three as he is driven to madness with curiosity; he exclaims “I pr’ythee, speak to me as to thy thinkings”. Critics have commented on the similarities between this scene and the biblical scene with Eve’s original sin in the Garden of Eden. Eve is driven by curiosity and temptation, leading her into eating the sinful apple. Likewise Othello cannot bear to “know’t a little”.

Iago is able to manipulate many characters so skilfully that they seem to be acting simultaneously of their own freewill. For example, it only takes the slightest prompting on Iago’s part to put Othello into the proper frame of mind to be consumed by jealously. This theme immerses most of the play; consequently resulting in its tragic nature. Iago is the antagonist and he relishes in the pain he causes. In Act three, scene three he quotes: “ Dangerous conceits are in their natures poisions Which at the first are scarce found to distaste But with a little act upon the blood Burn like the mines of sulphur.”Furthermore, much of the action in act three works coincidently in Iago’s favour and contributing to Othello’s anger. A very good example of this is, in scene three Othello says: “ I swear tis better to be much abus’d than but to know’t a little”. And Iago is fortunate to find himself alone with Othello at this key moment; which may be attributed to Desdemona having gone too far in her insistent demands on Cassio’s behalf. She is of course, unaware of the impression that this is further imprinting on Othello’s mind, due to the seed planted by Iago (of Desdemona and Cassio’s connection). Anyhow, Desdemona aids Iago’s case by being excessive and therefore arousing suspicion.

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In addition, Iago is canny and does not poison Othello’s mind with utter lies but he simply twists reality and the harmless actions of the other characters; in order to anger Othello. Othello becomes Iago’s sufferer as Iago exploits Cassio’s discomfort upon seeing Othello by interpreting it as a sign of guilt. Following this Iago quotes “I lay with Cassio lately… I heard him say, ‘Sweet Desdemona, let us be wary, let us hide our loves’…” Consequently here he is able to weaken links between Othello and loyal Cassio.

Othello can very much, become moulded into the victim ...

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