Roderigo Flashcards
(16 cards)
Which character did Shakespeare create (they are not in Un Capitano Moro)?
Roderigo
C: Call up her father…
…rouse him, proclaim him in the street, incense her kinsmen
1.1
My ___ ___ Roderigo, Whom ___ hath turned almost the ___ ___ ___.
- sick fool
- love
- wrong side out
C: ‘Who hast my purse…
…as if the strings were thine’ 1.1
What is Roderigo’s role in Othello?
- He is a mirror of Othello, a victim of self-consciousness.
- Roderigo’s willingness to be humiliated by Iago stems from a deep self-consciousness about social standing and masculinity.
- Whereas Othello is ashamed of his race, Roderigo believes he lacks the aforementioned qualities and this is why he has failed to court Desdemona.
‘The gross clasps…
…of a lascivious Moor’ 1.1
How does Roderigo show he is pathologically conditioned to see everyone in terms of rank?
He derogatively describes ‘a knave of common hire, a gondolier’ as how Desdemona was brought into the ‘clasps of a lascivious Moor’.
Why does Rod envy Cassio so much?
- Both are indigenous, white Venetians.
- Iago suggests that Cassio has bester Roderigo both sexually and professionally, inciting huge jealousy in him.
‘If thou be’st ___- as they say ___ being in ___ have then a ___ in their natures more than is ___ to them - list me’
- valiant
- base men
- love
- nobility
- native
What is the significance of Iago’s interpolation: ‘If thou be’st valiant - as they say base men…’?
- He provokes Roderigo into wanting to prove his worth and his nobility.
2.1
What does Iago achieve in act 2.1 with regards to Roderigo?
- He posits Cassio as the epitome of male virility and masculine drive by asking Roderigo ‘Didst thou not see her paddle with the palm of his hand?’
- He suggests that she is a normal woman (‘the wine she drinks is made of grapes’) as thus will submit to Cassio who is ‘framed to make women false’.
- This incites Roderigo into resolute action - he is envious, and feels less than manly.
I: ‘I mean ___, ___and
___ —this night show it.’
- purpose
- courage
- valour
How is Roderigo afforded some redemption?
The letters.
What is Rod’s dramaturgical function?
- To act as a conduit for Iago’s actions.
- Iago exhibits his powerful, Machiavellian manipulation.
What is Rod’s psychoanalytical function?
- He is privy to the same jealousies and insecurities as Othello.
- Sexuality and masculinity are the fundamental anxieties of the play’s male characters.