William Shakespeare's Othello is said to have written the Othello script on April 4, 1603, but nobody really knows. It was first held in front of James I. This is very creative. Because it has a black tragic hero. Not to mention the hero, there are black characters that were rarely seen at the time. Most of the theme of Shakespeare 's play is the same theme (love, jealousy, appearance and reality, dark and light). The theme is Othello's jealousy.
What is the most devastating human emotion in William Shakespeare's Othello? Othello of William Shakespeare clearly shows that the answer to this question is embarrassing. After all, embarrassment inspired Iago to plan to destroy the lives of several innocent people, including Othello, Desdemona, Emilia, Rodrigo. The play has distinctive features between Shakespeare's most despicable villain Iago and honest but misleading Othello. - Title: The tragic defect of Othello is a neurological disorder in human daily life. This tragic embarrassment can overcome some people's emotional obstacles by manipulating or paraphrasing the appropriate things at the right time and changing people from enemies to enemies . Under all circumstances, this unfortunate characteristic is always angry.
In the tragedy of William Shakespeare 's racial discrimination William Shakespeare, Othel' s racial discrimination notes the sneaky animal remarks on Iago 's Othello marriage, as well as other personality. In this article let's analyze the range of race reference and its hidden racial discrimination. Racial discrimination continued from the opening scene to the end of the show. "Difference in history: women of disgust and Othello", Valerie Wayne commented on racial discrimination reflected in women's views and experiences. This is often called feminist Christianity. Feminist Christ's theory has many kinds that can be divided into two categories. The school of revolutionary thinking was made by women and when they studied the Christian tradition they realized that men are dominant. The other is a reformist feminist theologist who discovered that the Christian tradition was dominated by men but found hope.