Othello Justice And Injustice Essay

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My frontispiece for Othello focuses on the play’s theme of justice. The story of Othello is fundamentally rooted in injustice, despite repeated mentions of how just a certain character’s actions are (see above). Examples pop up in every scene from Roderigo’s spurning at Desdemona’s hands to Cassio’s preferential promotion over Iago. The greatest injustice of all happens at the close of the play, with a number of lives lost: some completely innocent, others led to their doom by Iago - who suffers relatively little.
My project takes this oft-repeated notion of justice and injustice and frames it inside a court of law. By doing so, I hope to convey a strong sense of irony to the audience: the play pivots on judgement, law and morality, yet none of the action takes place within a courthouse or before a magistrate. In addition to the irony of the situation itself, I have …show more content…

Othello, being the titular character, occupies fifteen positions in our fictional court, each one quite powerful. He brings the case against Desdemona, and he tries, sentences and executes her: thus he occupies the judge’s chair, wields Death’s scythe, and forms the jury, all the while seated to the judge’s right as the prosecution. Furthermore, despite being the main character, Othello is quite passive until the end, his character arc fully engineered by Iago. Therefore, his courtroom roles are largely inactive: the judge and jury see what they are shown by the counselors (Iago) and make their final judgement based off that. In the same manner, Iago is the character who drives the plot forward, more so than any other, with the counselors bearing the same responsibility in the courtroom. The relative positions of the characters also serve to illustrate this, with Iago being the central figure and Othellos lining the sides. Desdemona sits in one corner, an afterthought in the dynamic between these two

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