othello
Tragedies frequently focus on a tragic hero that has a flaw that ultimately leads to his downfall. That flaw is commonly referred to as a tragic flaw that is inborn to the person and can reflect his background. In Aristotle's Poetics, he discusses the theory of tragedy and what criteria is essential in an ideal tragedy. According to Aristotle, the tragic flaw is the most important part of the hero and the events that occur in the work is a reflection of that flaw. A tragic flaw is essential in a true tragedy. In William Shakespeare's Othello, Othello is a prime example of an Aristotelian tragic hero. His gullibility and jealousy are the main reason of his downfall. Othello deals with love lost because of gullibility and jealousy. Aristotle's theory of tragedy, found in the Poetics, deals with the characteristics of plays that make them a true tragedy. Those characteristics are essential in giving a play its true definition. According to Aristotle, the life and soul of tragedy is plot. Incidents in the plot have the best effect if they occur unexpectedly, and in consequence of one another. A great tragedy grips the audience with the plot. Aristotle also states that the sense of the inevitable must be present in tragedy. The tragic
In reality, Othello was a gullible person drawn into jealousy and falseness by Iago. In his statement, "Give me a living reason she is disloyal. All of his characteristics made him a clear Aristotelian tragic hero as discussed in the Poetics. In her statement, "And but my noble moor is true of mind and made of no such baseness as jealous ones are, it were enough to put them to ill thinking. Othello was clearly manipulated by a person that recognized his natural flaws and used them to his advantage. Another part of the central character is that he is destroyed by himself, not by others, bad luck, or depravity. Iago's evil was structured on using falsities and insinuations to play on Othello's gullibility. Othello didn't make any real attempt to find out the truth. The tragic flaw of gullibility would lead his feelings to make bad judgments. He just made insinuations and suggestions about one. He also developed a jealousy that was caused by his credulousness. That nobility also what attracted Desdemona, his wife. He clearly called Othello a "credulous fool. " Iago comments on the people he caught and the ease of trickery.
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