Understanding Othello: A Student Casebook to Issues, Sources, and Historical Documents
By (Author) Faith Nostbakken
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Greenwood Press
30th August 2000
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Literary studies: c 1600 to c 1800
822.33
Hardback
256
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
567g
Although Othello has been one of Shakespeare's most popular plays, its performance history has been marked with risk and tension because of the play's focus on racial prejudice, gender conflict, and sexuality. The controversies surrounding conflicting attitudes toward race and religion, love and marriage, and war and the military in Shakespeare's time are reflected in the tragic plot and thematic ambiguities of Othello. This interdisciplinary casebook is designed to help students and their teachers explore the historical and modern issues related to the play. By combining primary documents with commentary, this guide considers many theatrical, cultural, social, and political concerns at the core of Othello. A literary analysis chapter addresses such topics as the nature of tragedy, the source of the play, and the richness of Othello's language, imagery, and thematic patterns. Three chapters on historical context consider attitudes toward race, love and marriage, and the role of the military in Shakespeare's time, revealing some of the social and political controversies reflected in Othello. A discussion of performance and interpretation traces the ways that changing cultural values and artistic expectations have affected the popularity and interpretation of Othello on stage, in film, and in literary criticism over the centuries. A final chapter on contemporary applications expands the focus of discussion to explore how Othello might reflect and challenge perspectives on contemporary stories, including both factual events recorded in newspaper headlines and fictional plots drawn from a variety of storylines in literature. Primary documents include excerpts from Renaissance travel journals, Elizabethan marriage and military conduct books, dramatic criticism and actors' journals, poetry, fiction, and recent newspaper articles and editorials relating to the trials of O. J. Simpson and the Unabomber. Numerous suggestions for written assignments, oral discussion, and further readings offer additional practical and creative ideas for examining the diverse topics of Othello.
.,."this book is a valuable addition to any collection of literacy criticisms and analyses."-School Library Journal
...this book is a valuable addition to any collection of literacy criticisms and analyses.-School Library Journal
Because many high school classes read Othello, this will be a welcome addition to your collection.-The GaleGroup
"Because many high school classes read Othello, this will be a welcome addition to your collection."-The GaleGroup
..."this book is a valuable addition to any collection of literacy criticisms and analyses."-School Library Journal
FAITH NOSTBAKKEN has taught literature at the college level. Her research focuses on Shakespeare and Renaissance drama, particularly the historical contexts. She is the author of Understanding Macbeth: A Student Casebook to Issues, Sources, and Historical Documents (Greenwood 1997).