Emilia's Speech in "Othello" and Its Teachings

538 Words2 Pages

Emilia's speech and its teachings.

In the play Othello The Moor of Venice, by William Shakespeare, Emilia's speech (4.3.84-103) has been called renaissance plea to women's liberation. This is because she tells of what she has experienced with her husband Iago, and what is bound to happen to her mistress Desdemona. Comparing their both lives in her speech, it vividly explains what happens to so many women in who are in a relationship, who find themselves in the same problem. According to her speech, there are some married women who do cheat on their husbands, there are problems in marriage relationships that men are the cause of them and she warns men that women can do what men can do.

There must have been a good reason that made Iago suspect his wife Emilia to be unfaithful with Othello, making him a bitter person who wanted to revenge so bad to Othello. Emilia admits that she can sleep cheat on her husband to make him a "monarch" (4.3.75-77). Also she say can cheat not in the daylight but when there is darkness (4.3.67-68), this means she can cheat as long as nobody else k...

More about Emilia's Speech in "Othello" and Its Teachings

Open Document