William Shakespeare's great work 'Othello' gives the reader an opportunity
to gain insight into the changing dimensions of world knowledge and continental
change at a very important transitional period in world history. In this
play the reader is confronted with the initial encounter experiences that
characterized the acceleration of expanded global perceptions and exploratory
individual encounter experiences as well as the dynamics of existential
perception and profound geo-political realignment. The fantasy backdrop
of this work acts as a kind of historical filter that probes into the pychologies
and struggles of the trans-European continuum moving into the Elizabethan
period ( to arrive at the 'Throne of Rationality'). It is for this reason
that the character Othello takes on an added significance because the appearance
of this character image-model was consistent with the expanded fantasy
platform Icons (tools) of the Renaissance period. That is, the creation
of the character Othello is consistent with the accelerated flow of expanded
information exchange that came about through exploratory trade route evolution
and world discovery in the fourteenth and fiftieth centuries. In seeking
to 'experience and understand' this character it is possible to gain insight
into the profound implications of cultural image- modeling constructs,
aesthetic/spiritual 'vibrational' modeling constructs (beliefs) and finally
geo-political (colonial expansion and notions of empire building) modeling
constructs- as major categories that underline the root of modern day intellectual
assumptions about the human species as well as the root of modern day image-constructs
about Africa and African identity . This is not to say that the character
Othello in itself has no dramatic or aesthetic quality, this is not my
point at all; I see the work as one of the great theater stories of all
time- but rather, the play can also be viewed as the 'O.J. Simpson' parameter
of its day, in that the underside of Othello's image spoke to several different
dimensions- all at once. There is the apparent play, the 'hidden' play
and the symbolic connections. The character Othello and the story of Othello
opens a door into 'the experiences of an era'.
The continental experiences that provided the backdrop for Shakespeare's
portrayal of the Othello character can be understood by 1) examining the
historical documentation that provided the identity constructs for his
character's imagery 2) examining the aesthetic dimensions of that information
as it relates to the play 3) and finally the symbolic and political implications
of this character from a composite world perspective. In the first category
the character Othello cannot be understood by only viewing the particular
actions of a fantasy play because this image-construct is a reflection
of a much broader psychology that is consistent with the historical documentation
that underlined the Renaissance period. To write this is to say that the
image of Othello as an African character is connected with the early collected
historical writings that sought to understand and record the 'characteristics
and ways of humanity' in the various expanding trading routes that opened
up in the 1550's - the worlds of the west Indies, Africa and the equator
regions - especially those groups of people who were seen as different
from the people recording the information . To understand this phenomenon
it is important to make serious distinctions about the aesthetic nature
of my inquiry, because to understand the subject of African image-modeling
constructs is not to understand the motives and aspirations of Africa (
as Africans seeking to explain their viewpoint of reality- so that we could
'learn' about who they are and their world view as it relates to the changing
world of the 1550's; rather the perception of Africa that had established
the image-construct of European character identity have been constructed
by Europeans from their own interest ( which in many cases have had nothing
to do with Africa or the African psychology). The seriousness of this distinction
must first be noted and addressed. Because the image-constructs of the
African identity image-model in the west has a 'peculiar relationship'
to Africa at best. There are three aspects of this phenomenon that interest
me: 1) the historical documentation of the early contact between
the English explorers and native African people and how that documentation
influenced the aesthetic parameters that led to the image-model for Shakespeare's
character 2) the 'terms of aesthetic definition' that allowed for the 'interpretat-ion'
of that material and 3) the related complexities of this aesthetic position-
in the 'real' and fantasy world. It is at this point where the genesis
'sentiments' of the African image-model can be found for it must be understood
that the British acceleration into the expanded world trade markets of
the fifteen hundreds took place nearly one hundred and fifty years after
the experiences of the Portuguese in northern and northwest Africa. The
consideration of time itself would become one of the factors that influenced
the spectra of decisions by given western political powers (countries)
to compete in the rush for extended political global domination. The need
for expanded trading and exploration was a gradual phenomenon that redefined
the parameters of intellectual and commercial speculation in the Renaissance
period. No one could really foresee the implications of global world trade
as a composite phenomenon in itself. By the time English explorers arrived
in west Africa, during the second acceleration of sea-trade and exchange,
the re balance of world political power was already in transition. The
documented writings of the early British voyagers are important because
it gives some sense of the 'real experience' of individual discovery in
those faraway new lands-based on actual encounter experiences, as opposed
to the inherited ancient Greek writings which were both factual and mythological.
The actual- encounter documentation that evolved through the naval exploration
experiences in the fourteen and fifteen hundreds represent a genesis source
of documentation that provides a framework to study the composite global
writings on Africa. This information is especially important if one seeks
to understand the summation image-constructs that would come to inform
fantasy characterizations of African continental people in the Elizabethan
period. The initial encounter experiences that characterized the experiences
of the first wave of English explorers took place before the beginning
of the fifteenth century, at least one hundred and fifty years before the
solidification of the Atlantic slave trade. In seeking to understand this
body of information we are looking at one of the principle genesis constructs
that allowed for European perceptions on African identity.
Up until the fifteen hundreds, English culture relied on the documentation
of the early Greeks for information about Africa and the lands of the east
as well as the expanding travel documentation of the Spanish and Portuguese.
The monastery to university movement in this time period would explore
the early works of Horotodus and Pliny the elder and the continental expansion
of European culture would see this information provide the backdrop
for the expansion of an empire from the southern part of the continent
to the northern land masses of Great Britain. The general tone of the early
Greek writings were basically respectful of the people they wrote about,
even though there was a tendency to exaggerate and fantasize about the
specifics (i.e. descriptions of animals, unfounded concepts of animal origins,
and 'tall tales'). This body of information has to be viewed with respect
to the existing state of possibilities in that time period. Problems of
geo-graphic error in the writings of the early Greeks is consistent with
the limitations of exploratory technology in that period of time. Even
so, the early writings of Horotodus and Pliny the elder most certainly
do acknowledge the existence of Africa- even on levels that present day
academicians would prefer not to think about ( i.e. Africa is the mother
of Western Civilization, Africa as the birth place of mathematics and geometry,
Africa as a place where new ideas always appear, and more important {to
me} Africa as a place that 'is different' from Europe). The early writings
would also generate the image of Africa as a mysterious land where strange
animals existed within a totally different environment state. By the middle
of the fiftieth century the beginning of the initial encounter documentation
would make itself felt to the greater Renaissance intellectuals. The year
1555 would be an important year for geo graphical writings in Renaissance
documentation as well as the emergence of scripture and philosophy as primary
sub themes that would outline the psychological model for intellectual
and image-model perceptual constructs. There are two books that show a
confluence of Englishman notions about Africa in the sixteen hundreds that
are relevant to the subject of character and aesthetic modeling; 1) 'The
Gardle of Facions' by William Waterman and 2) The Decades of The New World'
by Peter Martyr. Waterman's book acknowledges early Greek sources as the
supreme source and authority of the early writings about Africa and the
thrust of his efforts sought to reestablish and distribute that information
in the 'modern' context of Medieval printing and distribution. He writes;
"The Fardle of Facions conteining the Auncient maners, customes and lawes
of the people enhabiting the two portes of the earth called Affricke and
Asie'. Mr Waterman's approach is more akin to the spirit of story telling
rather than science. Even so, his book establishes a set of themes that
would be consistent with the composite writings of his countrymen, that
being; a) the legend of Prester John b) the strange monsters and people
of Africa c) the fabulous wealth and gold of Africa d) the heat and rain
of the African continent and e) the deserts. In the book 'Othello's Countrymen'
by Eldred Jones {pp. 10} Mr. Jones writes
'Personal accounts of strange people like the King of Benin must have fertilized
the imagination of creative writers. This is the kind of suggestion that
may have led by devious ways to a black Othello'. The voyages of Sir John
Hawkins would also affect the restructural image-model of the African man.
In his writings would be found a) the first use of the word 'Negro' b)
first mention of contact with an African King who did not keep an immoral
bargain to give Hawkin's slave at the end of an immoral bargain between
the two men ( this King is reputedly the King of Mina). This historical
incident is viewed as connected to Robert Peele's play 'The Battle of Alcazar
(where a Negro King (Muly Hamet- known as 'The Black King' lured a young
Portuguese King Sebastian, and the 'flower of Portuguese youth' into a
battle in Africa- to their deaths. Richard Hakluyt's book 'Principal Navigation's
would also be an important source of global information. The focus of this
book would a) establish a global perspective that would influence business
people, investors , traders as well as artist and poets b) Hakluyt's book
established new sources of imagery and c) new background material for character
development (i.e. sea fight imagery, new island scenes). The writer Lois
Whitney says that 'The History and Description of Africa by John Leo could
have also been a model for Shakespeare's creation of Othello. In this book
can be found a) passages on the solder ship of the Moors b) their credulity
c) their capacity for love d) their high regard of chastity e) their jealousy
and f) the fury of their wrath. All of this information would set the tone
and image parameter-spectra of the African man in English literature.
The historical documentation of early English exploration in Africa
is important because it clearly establishes that: 1) the English explorers
initial-encounter (reception) to the inhabitants of Africa gave insight
into more than any 'one zone' of information transference 2) that
the base assumptions behind the recorded documentation of the explorers
opens a door into the psychological reality of the English explorers as
much as it describes the particulars of African reality 3) that fantasy
and factual information of Africa in the Elizabethan time period would
become its own 'separate category'- for European curiosity, science and
entertainment (with its own set of dynamic implications for the expanded
world stage). In the first category the early explorer writings clearly
establishes that the African people the English explorers encountered in
the early journeys were 'in the process of living their lives' and that
there was also a sense of individual and group experience in the various
'native' groups they encountered. The Mandeville writings are important
to establish the genesis social/aesthetic/and spiritual climate that the
English sought to understand and document. Of the Numedians Mandeville
writes: 'The folk that wone {live} in that country are called Numedians
and they are christended ..But they are black of color, and that they hold
a great beauty , and aye the blacker they are the fairer them think them.
And they say that and they should paint an angel and a fiend, they would
paint the angel black and the fiend white. And if they think them not black
enough when they are born, they use certain medicines for to make them
black withal, That country is wonder hot, and that makes that folks thereof
so black' { }. This paragraph establishes one of the most central
aspects to the whole question of 'applied aesthetics' and the trans/image-model
of the African man. Because the initial encounter experiences of the early
English travelers would contain, and in some cases initiate the iconic
quality constructs of an African image model based on a premise that implies
'the most basic crime of the African is that he is not European'. To understand
this phenomenon is to be confronted with how the significance of interpretation-interjections
from outside the African community would be used to undermine African reality,
identity and value systems.
The early English writings on Africa establish eight zones of perceptual
reality: 1) that the physiognomy of the African people were not beautiful
in the eyes of the English 2) that the consideration of skin complexion
would become a focus unto itself 3) that Africans were a particularly libidinous
sort of people when compared to the Europeans 4) that there were no unified
religious structures in the country and every man had his own religion
('pagan time') 5) that the African man could not be trusted to keep his
word 6) that the land of Africa contains many strange beast 7) that
the continent possessed magical things and the promise of riches (gold)
and 8) that the African man was either a separate strain of humanity or
was bestial (i.e. so-called primitive). In the first category the physiology
of the African people would become a polarity tool that allowed Europeans
to 'like themselves better'. A special psychological 'sentiment' would
surface immediately in the early English exploratory writings- a 'sentiment'
that viewed the physiology of the African as distasteful, repellent and
ugly - that is to write, that the physiology of the Africans did not look
Caucasian. The Oxford English Dictionary describes the meaning of black
before the sixteenth century as, "Deeply stained with dirt; soiled, dirty
foul... Having dark or deadly purposes, malignant; pertaining to or involving
death, deadly; baneful, disastrous, sinister.. Foul. iniquitous, atrocious,
horrible, wicked. ...Indicating disgrace, censure, liability to punishment,
etc. Black was an emotionally partisan color... the handmaid and symbol
of baseness and evil, a sign of danger and repulsion.". All of these factors
are involved in the summation image that formed the image-construct of
the African man in the Renaissance period. In Alden T. Vaughan's book 'Roots
of American Racism' he writes '... the English name for central and southern
Africans came from their skin color. Throughout Europe, in fact, Africans
were "blacks, ""blackamores," or "Negroes"; to the Spanish, Portuguese,
and Italians, they were "negros' and "negras"; to the Dutch, they were
"negers." And in each language the word for "black" carried a host of disparaging
connotations. In Spanish, for examples, "negro "also meant gloomy, dismal
, unfit , and wretched; in French, 'noir' also connoted foul, dirty, base,
and wicked; in Dutch , certain compounds of 'zwart conveyed notions of
anger, irascibility, and necromancy; and "black" had comparable pejorative
implications in Elizabethan and Stuart England. { pp. 6}. The combine weight
of these 'aesthetic associations' can be viewed as a kind of 'stacked deck'.
The word Black could also mean dark skin- as in satanic; "black comedy";
dark, as in 'darkest Africa'.
The aesthetic background information that provided the terms of meaning
and value system judgments of Renaissance culture is the second category
of historical modeling that influenced the image-model creation of the
Othello character. The spectra of that information reflects on 1) the tenet
constructs of Christianity 2) the aesthetic dimensions of color 3) the
emergence of Calvinist movement 4) the 'sacrificed position' of European
women 5) the separation between body and mental identities and 6) the emergence
of modern scientific constructs. In the first consideration, the old and
new testament established the mythical notions of Adam and Eve and their
son Ham who commits the first of the 'new violations' (after the Garden
of Eden experience). This concept reappears in the new testament , after
the flood, where the story of Cain and Abel recounts a 'second profound
violation' by Cain. In this same set of writings (the Bible) the subject
of 'light' and 'Divine Providence' would actualize the image-model existence
of Jesus (i.e. and his physical racial properties) would become the new
God head (logos) of the trans Christian Religion. The composite solidification
of the Renaissance period is important because it is in this time space
where the genesis constructs of the trans-Christian movement is brought
to its most elaborate extension- that is, the Renaissance period as the
fulfillment of Christian mysticism and ceremony. As a spiritual logos,
the phenomenon of color in Christian theology would establish the color
white as synonymous with the color of the Deity and black as representative
of the attributes of the Devil. And to complete this construct a concept
of Divine Providence was formed as a gradient-logic construct (paradigm)
that would allow for the concept of 'proximity' (to the Divine) to be isolated
and measured. With this innovation it would then be possible to establish
a concept that measured 'light reflected through darkness' ( 'White is
the goal'!).
The third category that influenced the image-model construct of the
Othello character is the evolution of restructural Medieval theater. In
this area of focus can be sited 1) the iconic mystical constructs of the
early theater movements 2) the emergence of the Masque and its related
form-state 3) the impact of the new visitors on the continent as 'visitors'
of the 'Crown' and 4) the extensions of 'new continental mythologies' (from
the new 'acquired lands'). The evolution of the Masque ceremonies
of the middles ages can be viewed as one of the principle domains that
sought to ritualize and identify the iconic and symbolic experiences (
and relationships) of Christian ceremony. In itself, the Masque and pageantry
movement was a short lived movement that existed for one hundred and fifty
years. The formal characteristics of this form utilized 1) dance as a nucleus
of the creative experience (art form) 2) the use of applied 'blackface'
and 3) the image-characterization of the Devil is portrayed as black. The
extended practice of 'blackening' would enter into the more 'sophisticated
court spectacles in the 1600's and even nobility would take part. Queen
Anne requested the use of a 'Blacke-More' in a Masque as well. By the year
1555 the color black had been firmly positioned to represent the opposite
of Christian values (and images). In this new form of pageantry the image
of the 'black person' would be used to solidify 'grotesqueness' and foolery.
So powerful was this imagery for the English that the Moor would become
a central sub-theme inside the form; a category unto itself (i.e. the Masque
of Moors). This iconic figure would lead the way in the parades that started
the Masque as a transitional formal state. Mr. Jones in 'Othello's Countrymen'
wrote that from the very beginning of the Masque, vague connections to
African imagery can be found throughout the form, from poetic descriptions
to ceremonial depiction's (i.e. dress and 'zones of exotica') and that
these references would solidify into 'an African image' with the composite
formal state of the Masque. John Leo book is sited by Ben Jonson in his
"Masque of Blackness' work ( which was a pivotal work that would scandalize
the English nobility). Leo writes, 'Pliny, Solinus, Ptolemey, and of late
leo The African, remember unto us a river in Aethiopia, famous by the name
of Niger, of which the people were called Nigritae, and now negro's; and
are the blackest nation of the world'. The story of 'The Masque of Blackness'
has a character called the King of Egypt who had a black face and was the
father of Saint George'. This relationship is another example of the profound
connections that existed in the ancient world. Another character of the
Masque is the use of dance as a nuclear identity focus that solidifies
ceremony ( and even more special, that solidifies mutable ritual logic's
and fantasy symbolism). The name of this form of dance
was 'Morisce' or "Morisco' which has an association with the word Moor
and/or Morocco. The use of African symbolism in the Masque extended into
the meta-image 'genesis associations' that gave insight into the 'spiritual
essence' of the form. In the black Masque existed twelve Nymphs,
Negro's, and the daughters of Niger (referring to Nigeria- 'The blackest
nation of the world'. And finally, the fantasy story itself involved the
challenge of whether this group of charact-ers could survive and bath thirteen
nights in the ocean, and if so, 'they would gain whiteness and beauty (pp.
32). This is a gradient logic formal symbolism that extends the same formal
constructs that defined the ' the closer one is to light, the nearer one
is to God'. The recognition of change of complexion in time( i.e. sound/color
mass recognition) as a domain of identity in itself. The use of this concept
as an image- construct (icon) would accelerate and amplify the forming
of the black and white Moor concept, as dramatic tools that could be used
in a way that would be consistent with Christian iconography and 'dynamic
motivation' (!) (?).
By the opening of the decades of the sixteen hundreds there would be
two established image models of the African fantasy character. The first
of which is 1) the image of the villainous Moor 2) the image of the 'tawny
Moor' or white Moor and 3) the arrival of Othello as a signal of 'universal
adjustments'. In the first example, the character Muly Hamet in the Battle
of Alcazar, Aaron in 'Titus Andronicus, and Eleazer in 'Lust's Dominion
are examples of characters who clearly demonstrated the unchristian way
with their 'modern behavior'. In the second category, the character abdilmelec
is generally viewed as an example of a more dignified Moor (even if still
capable of cruelty like the other Moors). The character Othello is an example
of the universal Moor whose actions the theater go'er can relate to from
a composite human perspective. Othello is presented in the story as a human
being with human faults, and his 'Africanness' becomes a prism that is
used to postulate universal assumptions. Even so, the play Othello is shot
through with set up situations where the theater go'er is given an opportunity
to laugh at the'way of the African' ( and how 'primitive they are when
compared to the Europeans'). Humor becomes a layer of this construct, for
throughout the play Shakespeare gives his audience 'quick vibrational slice
thought flashes' - like Emilias 'traditional contempt' for Africa quickly
returned without missing a beat when she discovers the truth about Othello
( this is just like the O.J. Simpson affair). The most profound use of
humor in Othello for me is the scene where Othello talks to Emila after
the murder of Desdamona. When she keeps repeating 'My husband? { 5. 2.
140}. Suddenly the theater go'er is laughing and crying at the same time!
Shakespeare the conceptualist covers all of the primary bases of the African
image-construct; take for instance 1) Iago's total contempt for Othello's
intellect ( and the story back's up Iago, not Othello) and 2) the credulity
of the African nature ( Iago; "These Moors are changeable in their wills').
These concepts are the backbone of the modern era.
The concept of the libidinous African man was established in the early
writings of the English explorers. In this concept the African is portrayed
as somehow 'not natural', or maybe 'too natural' for the psychology of
the early explorers. Yet when the subject of sexual dynamics comes up from
the global perspective it is the Renaissance viewpoint that is called into
question. This is not to comment on the documented impressions of the early
explorers but rather it is important to not confuse the actual 'reality
experiences' of the African people ( in the act of living in their own
world and territories and experiencing that world in a way that made sense
to them) with the viewpoint of pan-Christian colonialists. The writings
of the early explorers really tell us more about the writers themselves
rather than the African people. Wintrop Jordan in 'White over Black' writes
that 'the undertone of sexuality run throughout many English accounts of
West Africa {pp33}. Mr. Jordan sites as an example of this phenomenon the
so-called lustful embrace of Othello were "the gross clasps of a lascivious
Moor". Francis Bacon's New Atlantis (ca. 1624) referred to "an holy hermit"
who "desired to see the Spirit of Fornication; and there appeared to him
a little foul ugly Aethiop". There would also be much mention of the size
of the African penis (and comparisons to apes and
Gorillas). All of these attempts to understand the physical nature of the
African man would help to solidify one component of the natural philosophy
movement that would lead to the construction of 'chain of being' postulates
and the emergence of Linnaean biological classification concepts. In its
extended form, the European Renaissance man would find the need to 'control
their sexual urges' (and make a restructural separation between mind concept
of body 'affinities') and even more important, 'control their wives sexual
urges'. To understand the depth of sexuality as a sub-category of Renaissance
drama, and Othello in particular, one needs only to examine the text of
the play. What can be said about the character Iago, who soliloquizes upon
his own motives in the play; "I hate the Moor,/ And it is thought abroad
that 'twixt my sheets/ He has done my office." Later in the play Iago says
"For that I do suspect the lusty Moor hath leaped into my seat." But these
examples are only the beginning of the 'hidden secrets' of the play. The
character Iago is really voicing the aesthetic 'lessons' of the play. And
when Othello finally accepts Iago's premise he begins to accept that physical
distinction do matter; "For she had eyes and chose me." He then goes on
to say: " Her name, that was as fresh, As Dian's visage, is now begrim'd
and black As mine own face. Then the play becomes 'clearer to the
point': Iago says " your daughter and the Moor are now making the beast
with two backs", and later "and old black ram/ Is tupping your white ewe'
and still later "your daughter cover'd with a Barbary horse." and for Brabantio,
the marriage of Othello to his daughter was "against all rules of nature".
Later still he says ...what was responsible for this sad change of events
when he ask Othello what other cause could have brought a girl" so tender,
fair, and happy' / To incur a general mock / Run from her guardage to the
sooty bosom / of such a thing as thou. later after Othello had killed his
wife he groans to Emilia, "Twas I that killed her"; and Emilia responds
with a torrent of condemnation or , rather, of expulsive repudiation; "O/1
the more angel she,/ And you the blacker devil." Of Desdemona; "She was
too fond of her filthy bargain.: To Othello: "O gull! O dolt/ As ignorant
as dirt!" In this new world of rationality the women were expected to be
a) loyal and obedient b) house keepers and cookers c) and to obey their
husbands - right or wrong. These concepts had nothing to do with Africa.
The evolution of the Othello image-construct model can also be traced
to the extended fantasy materials that came from contact with the new worlds.
These experiences would provide the seeds for fresh storytelling models
for restructural Renaissance poetry and theater. There are three aspects
of character image-modeling that is related to the Othello character that
is relevant to this paper 1) the psychological nature of Othello the play
2) the psychological nature of the character Othello and 3) the significance
of inter-racial union in the Renaissance period. Before the play can be
approached there are several psychological assumptions that must be accepted.
The first of which is; a) that the character Othello exists in a
fantasy context that takes his 'inferior status' (as a human being) as
an accepted fact that needs no debate (Throughout the play one is reminded
of this sub-human status) b) Brabantio accuses Othello of 'black
magic' in getting Desdemona to marry him right at the beginning of the
play - as a way to 'acknowledge' the impossibility of natural attraction
to Othello from his daughter c) four billion mentions of Othello's 'vile
race' from the beginning of the play to the end. In Mr. Shakespeare's 'Othello'
black characters are always apologizing for their color because Shakespeare
would have us believe that an African man must naturally accept 'the perception
of inferiority' when viewed from a European construct. This is true even
when the African character is a Prince, as in the Prince of Morocco. How
strange it is to hear a Prince apologize for his color, "Mislike me not
for my complexion,/ The shadow'd liery of the burnish'd sun,/ To whom I
am a neighbour and near bred." As for the character Derdamona, she
is the epitome of grace, beauty and honor, even to the point of honoring
her husband on her death bed- (even 'after death' she comes back to do
good- 'what a lady'!).
When the Othello character speaks in act 5, scene two, he helps the
audience to choose between hierarchical or multiple 'correspondences (and
I could relate to a guy who needs to unify 'a theme'). 'It is the cause,
it is the cause, my soul;'......' Put out the light, and then put out the
light;'. Othello is referring to the mystery of existence and the wonder
of men, women and sex. The vibrational weight of this soliloquy frames
the journey of a guy who thought he'd done everything right by trusting
his 'base assumptions'. Obviously, Othello must be a fool! Because those
were not the right assumptions in the first place. 'It is the cause',
this is a character who has evolved in the 'man'z world' of the military
where the quality of 'so-called' honor is not supposed to be questioned.
Sure, it is true that the guys have always 'stacked the deck' against the
women; but in this play we now are led to believe that a man's best friend
and colleague would do him in ( right in the back) and 'breach' the 'code
of men'. And the answer is, of course, this is the case. For Othello not
to know this universal fact was a serious error. The concept of 'put out
the light' has a profound Egyptian connection, for the imagery of light
(and 'the cult of light') came out of 'the old country' ( and I am not
referring to ancient Greece). That the phenomenon of 'light' was not perceived
as 'an instinctual quality,' as opposed to a rational or meditative quality,
might imply that Othello had separate from a 'relevant sensibility' ( that
could have maybe increased the outcome of the play to his advantage- certainly,
it could not have made the situation any worse, that's for sure). For Iago
to sing; "And let me the canakin clink, clink; And let me the canakin clink.
A soldier's a man; O, man's life's but a span; Why then let a soldier drink."
Some wine, boys!" (11.iii. 70). Othello should have known then something
was up.
And what of the political social implications of the image-logic construct
of the Othello character as a phenomenon that influenced the spread
of extended European colonialism in the 1660's? This is a subject that
can never be resolved on any one plane of inquiry; yet even so, one is
left with the residue ('odor, if you will) of a very special period in
human history that begs the following associations: 1) the role and
aesthetic purpose of restructural theater in the Renaissance period, 2)
the use of image-manipulation as the first degree of 'esthetic-realignment'(!)(?)
3) the continental route of European 'revealed' racism 4) and the esthetics'
of trans-planted Christianity. In the first category, let me state
my viewpoint clearly and with no complexity: I have only wonder and awe
for the existence of the great Renaissance theater tradition and even more,
I have benefited in my personal life from the existence of this body of
information. My attempts to better understand this subject is based on
the challenge of growth and change ( and 'so-called' curiosity) as well
as a need to better understand the composite arena of the sixteen hundreds.
The 'dynamic implications of this time period is important because the
full weight of western imperialism (i.e. colonialism and slavery) would
solidify as a 'cultural Identity'- that would later be translated into
a cultural political process. The role of Renaissance theater in
the Elizabethan theater time space is important because the theater was
a component in the 'inner intellectual' life of the people - especially
the nobility ( and the artists). Shakespeare most certainly recognized
this relationship as the documentation makes it very clear that the poetic
intellectual tradition was very much aware of the expanding news of world
discovery and 'exotic curiosities'. The beauty of Shakespeare's work for
me involves how he is able to take a spectrum of fantasy characters that
draw on the available pychologies of their time space and make it live.
In taking this position Shakespeare is in agreement with the aesthetic
viewpoint of art as a reflection of composite reality. To experience the
play Othello is to enter into a fantasy world that gives insight into an
expanded psychological period in human history- suddenly for the first
time sense the 'ancient experiences' humanity would be confronted with
the existence of new people, new lands for exploration, new foods, materials
as well as the first scent of secular freedom. To probe into the inner
dimension of Renaissance psychology is to better understand the value systems
and motivations that dictated the events of an era.
The vibrational 'radiance-impact' of restructural Elizabethan theater
presentation established a unique fantasy context (platform) that allowed
for an expansion of formal and conceptual constructs. To understand this
phenomenon is to recognize the uniqueness of a theater approach that 1)
contained symbolic-spatial references 2) established demarcation
zones that allowed for multiple time-space story assumptions to happen
in 'real time' and even more important for this paper 3) allowed for 'real-time'
response actions to take place between the actors and the audience. To
experience a play like Othello would be to enter into a 'ritual contract'
between the characters, story and the 'secret' celebration of the inner
'codes'. The summation 'realness' of Renaissance theater would come to
provide an intellectual and aesthetic platform that commented on the changing
life of a culture in transition. The dialogue in Othello tells us something
about the vibrational reality of human nature and human experience. My
point is this, the documentation seems to clearly suggest that the psychological
fantasies demonstrated in the works of Shakespeare's work Othello were
consistent with the value systems that led to the colonial experiences-
but there is more. From the vantage point of three hundred years we can
now view the documentation of the English as the fulfillment of the Old
and New Testament writings ( that established Ham and the notion of black
as evil and/or 'fallen' - leading into, after the flood, the story of Cain
and Abel; leading to the concept of God as the source of all things, to
the idea of Man ( not woman- but this decision cannot be blamed on Africa
either) as created in the image of God, to the idea of certain sectors
of humanity can be viewed as 'not as God-like as others' and as a
result can be put into slavery ( or destroyed). This is not to say that
any one sector can be blamed for anything- this is not my point at all.
Rather, the restructurual tools of Renaissance theater would help to open
the psychological 'notions and tendencies' of a culture in a way that was
both unique and effective. Audiences at a given play got involved with
the drama in a way twentieth century audiences sometimes fail to recognized.
The Renaissance theater was a living tradition that reflected the poetics
of its people.
The internal social reality dynamics of the Renaissance Period cannot
be separated from the composite changes reshaping world communication and
travel. Emily Bartels writes in "Making More of the Moor: that 'a prime
target of racism becomes not the outsider, but the insider, the population
that threatens by being too close to home, too powerful, too successful,
or merly too present.' I read this viewpoint as an awareness of the profound
complexities that come into play when one seeks to understand an era of
such magnitude. This concept also recognizes the 'boomerang' effect of
cosmic time cycle and 'earth wonder'. It was one thing to erect a concept
of reality that imposes an 'aesthetic-position', and another thing to live
in 'that same aesthetic position'. The profound implications of the spiritual
and iconic postulates of the trans-Christian movement would create a new
world order that demonstrated the greatness of Europe on one hand, while
at the same time create 'existential pychologies' that would also create
'restructual complexities' ( if I can write it that way). I agree with
Michial Neill when he writes of a 'racialist ideology'-was taking shape
within such representations alongside and 'under the pressure of ( Neill
suggests) the nation's "nascent imperialism'. Neill then goe's on to write,
'When Queen Elizabeth writes to the Moslem leaders of Turkey, attempting
to represent herself as the "most mighty defender of the Christian faith
against all kind of idolatries"- a 'signature axiom' was already 'in the
works'. Nor have I meant to in any way dis-respect any particular religion
- this is the 'stuff' of history'.
The subject of Othello as a image-model construct that reflects on the
political and social dimensions of the sixteen hundreds transcends any
one domain and reflects on the internal balances on composite European
expansion (and interaction dynamics). This is the time period in European
history where concepts developed that discussed the proper domain
and boundaries of religious control (versus religious freedom) and the
character and purpose of society. That the acceleration of the slave trade
would come from this region of people in this most 'epiphanial time' cannot
be dismissed as inconsistent with what appears to be a most unique aesthetic
disposition. In the play Othello, the character Desdamona has shocked the
whole world by marrying a black general. Somehow the nature of this 'shock'
is connected with the seemingly 'impossibility' of a Caucasian woman having
an attraction to a black man- and with the abundance of literature written
in that time period, it is easy to see why African men were viewed as bestial
and 'smelly'. But what is one to think when reading about the life of Olaudah
Equiano and the works of the Freed African blacks in the seventeen hundreds;
'He married an English woman in 1792, and one of their two daughters lived
to inherit the sizable estate he left at his death on march 31, 1797'.
Evidently in less than a hundred years there are records of interracial
marriages - unless poor Miss Equiano was the only English Lady of her generation
to marry an African man. This is not only the case for the English but
applies to the whole of Europe in transition (and later, the Americas).
Not to mention the profound sexual experiences of the European explorers
in their new encounters. I write this not to point fingers at the Europeans
but only to state that the existence of different kinds of people on a
planet is not an intellectual construct that involves only one dimension
(where someone can agree and not agree with the 'fact' of a peoples existence').
The works of William Shakespeare are important because it documents the
dynamic complexities that were in the air, and it hints at the undercurrent
nature of the human species. To write that the play describes a racist
people and a racist culture is to mis-read the challenge of theater and
fantasy.
In the end, we do know this about Othello: 1) even though he is a great general he can never afford to 'not watch his back'. 2) that the concept of friendship and alliance can be complex 3) that by killing his wife whatever the character says as justification will make us hate him even more 4) that Othello's last lines of the play 'mean nothing' (because there can be no symphethy for a murderer 5) that Iago's wife Emile is a hero type character who I still hate, because at her heart.... she is a racist 6) that Desdamona took the wrong time to play handkerchief games with her husband 7) that no matter his success in the military 'a nigger is still a nigger' {taken from 'Roots' (smile) } 8) that if a woman marries someone her father disagrees with, no good will come of it (?) 9) that five hundred books can be written about whether or not their relationship was consummated- but it was always clear that they were 'moving in that direction' - either way, their union continues to fascinate us and 10) that maybe Othello should have stayed in north Africa and not changed his name to O.J. Simpson.