Othello (Plot + Analysis) Flashcards

(39 cards)

1
Q

Where does Othello begin and why it matters

A

Venice then Cyprus which shifts from orderly law to isolated military chaos

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2
Q

What is Iago’s core method of control

A

He engineers situations then lets others “confirm” his story through inference

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3
Q

What does “reputation” do in the play

A

It’s a social currency that Iago weaponizes to destroy trust and status

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4
Q

What is the handkerchief’s function

A

A prop turned “proof” that converts suspicion into certainty

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5
Q

Why is Cassio’s demotion a turning point

A

It creates a “reasonable” grievance Iago uses to hook Othello

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6
Q

How does Iago manipulate without direct claims

A

Leading questions, hints, pauses, and “reluctant honesty” performance

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7
Q

What is dramatic irony’s role

A

Audience knows Iago’s plan so every trust decision feels tragic and inevitable

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8
Q

What makes Othello vulnerable to Iago

A

Outsider status, insecurity about belonging, and reliance on “honest” military logic

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9
Q

How is jealousy presented

A

Not as love, but as possession, fear, and imagined humiliation

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10
Q

What is the “ocular proof” idea

A

Othello demands evidence but accepts staged signs instead of real verification

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11
Q

How does the Cyprus setting change dynamics

A

Fewer checks on power, more surveillance rumor, and private manipulation

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12
Q

What is Desdemona’s main “threat” to patriarchy

A

She chooses her husband and speaks with moral confidence

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13
Q

How does gender power show up

A

Women are judged as property while men police honor through control and violence

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14
Q

What is Emilia’s arc

A

From cynical obedience to moral witness when truth costs her life

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15
Q

What does Cassio represent

A

Reputation and professionalism fragile under gossip and staged scandal

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16
Q

What does Roderigo represent

A

Disposable desire he bankrolls the plot and gets discarded

17
Q

How does Iago use racism

A

As a ready-made explanation that makes others’ suspicion feel “natural”

18
Q

How does Brabantio function early on

A

He frames Desdemona’s choice as theft witchcraft and disorder

19
Q

What is the play’s tragic structure

A

Noble figure brought down by fatal flaw plus external manipulation

20
Q

What is Othello’s hamartia in IB terms

A

Trusting appearances and equating love with control plus insecurity about status

21
Q

What is Iago’s “motive” problem

A

His reasons shift which suggests power and pleasure in control are the real motive

22
Q

How does language show Othello’s collapse

A

Moves from measured rhetoric to fragmented violent imagery and certainty

23
Q

What is the role of soliloquies

A

They give Iago narrative control and make the audience complicit as witnesses

24
Q

What is the “appearance vs reality” theme

A

Characters perform roles and trust surfaces over substance

25
How is love contrasted
Desdemona’s loyalty vs Othello’s conditional possessive “love”
26
What is the function of the Senate scene
Public law briefly protects Othello but private prejudice persists
27
Why is Desdemona’s advocacy for Cassio important
Her honesty is misread as sexual guilt because of sexist assumptions
28
What is the significance of the “temptation” scene
Iago turns language into a trap and Othello chooses certainty over doubt
29
How does Iago create a feedback loop
Plant suspicion provoke behavior then use that behavior as confirmation
30
What is the role of silence and pauses
Iago’s hesitation makes him seem truthful and forces Othello to fill gaps
31
How is violence normalized
Honor culture makes control and punishment seem “reasonable” to men
32
What is the function of Bianca
She mirrors how women are sexualized and blamed regardless of truth
33
How does the play treat “honesty”
The word becomes ironic because “honest Iago” is the biggest lie
34
What is Othello’s key decision point
He prioritizes reputation and control over dialogue and mutual trust
35
How does the murder scene work dramatically
Private intimacy becomes a courtroom and execution with Othello as judge
36
What is the catastrophe
Truth is revealed too late and the social order “restores” itself through death
37
How does the ending frame responsibility
Othello blames Iago but also claims agency through final narrative control
38
What is a strong global issue for Othello
Misinformation and social prejudice enabling gendered violence
39
What is a strong authorial choice to mention
Iago’s rhetorical manipulation and the handkerchief as staged evidence