Manipulation and Jealousy in Shakespeare's Othello

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The Green-Eyed Monster There are evil, manipulative people in this world. Iago, in Othello by William Shakespeare, is a great example. He uses people 's weaknesses, honor, and ignorance to control them fueled by the very “Green-eyed monster” (III.iii.166). Jealousy dwells in every human no matter how good-hearted one is, but it is an option whether to recognize it or not. Unlike Iago, Othello was not aware of the jealousy that was inside him; therefore, he was not able to control it. Iago exploits this opportunity to reveal Othello’s inner jealousy and guide him into tragedy by manipulating the other characters. Jealousy controls almost every character from the beginning of the play. Roderigo is jealous of Othello because he has Desdemona, and to the end, when Othello kills his faithful wife because he believes she was having an affair with Cassio. Much of the jealousy in the play is at the hand of Iago by lying, controlling, and misleading people masked by his honesty. He is trying to make everyone feel what has consumed him, jealous on Cassio for having a higher status and hatred on Othello for giving Cassio
Othello exhibits a numerous ammount of symptoms which suggest he suffers from such dementia cause by Iago’s misleading facts. Iago convinces Othello that his wife is having an affair with cassio. Othello looses his heroic persona because he now is mentally unstable and decides to “chop her into messes”(IV.i.202). Unlike Othello, Iago’s jealousy does not come from a dementia caused by her loved one instead it is fueled by envy. This allows him to be always thinking and planning his scheme. A tremendous example of Iago’s jealousy, brilliant mind, and deviousness is when Cassio finds the handkerchief on his bed that Emilia had placed there by pure coincidence which sends Othello over the

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