Insanity In Othello

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In the play Othello, by William Shakespeare, although Iago pulls all the right strings to trigger Othello’s descent into madness, Othello still contributes to his own downfall. Othello has various issues in his psyche that make Iago’s mission to poison Othello’s mind effortless. First, Othello’s sexual insecurity and his false ideas about love and marriage induce the gradual dissolution of his marriage with Desdemona. Next, Othello’s need for absolute knowledge drives him to insanity at the end of the play. Finally, Othello’s feeling of being an outsider and his self-loathing tendencies are partially responsible for his eventual suicide.
Othello has evident sexual insecurities that make him an easy target for Iago to manipulation. When the Duke and Brabantio learn of Othello’s marriage to Desdemona, Othello announces …show more content…

When Othello begins to doubt Desdemona’s faithfulness, he speaks of the change of Desdemona’s face that “is now begrimed and black/As [his] own face” (3.3.385-386). As Othello starts to view Desdemona negatively, he compares her face to his own. Othello implies in this passage that he has always been as appalling as he claims Desdemona has become. In fact, Iago picks up on the same idea of self-hate with Roderigo earlier in the play. In response to Roderigo’s wish to die for his love to Desdemona, Iago answers that he has “never found man that knew how to love himself” (1.3.312). Indirectly, Iago states that no men are capable of loving themselves, including Othello. Iago’s generalization is directed towards Othello since he is the hero of this tragic story. Iago observes Othello’s difficulty to accept himself. Iago manipulates Othello to aggravate the state of his insecurities, that stem from Othello’s ultimate struggle of feeling like an outsider in this

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