Othello Act 4 s i

Lesson objectives 
Global issue construction 
Considering Iago's skills at making Othello jealous 
How is Othello's emotional turmoil shown in speech 
Hitting Desdamona what is the outcome? 
Othello from nobel general to wifebeater 

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Slide 1: Slide
EngelsUpper Secondary (Key Stage 4)GCSE

This lesson contains 12 slides, with text slides.

Items in this lesson

Lesson objectives 
Global issue construction 
Considering Iago's skills at making Othello jealous 
How is Othello's emotional turmoil shown in speech 
Hitting Desdamona what is the outcome? 
Othello from nobel general to wifebeater 

Slide 1 - Slide

Construction of a good global issue
In your groups complete assignment a) and b) 
Discuss in your groups. 
Then complete assignment c)

timer
1:00

Slide 2 - Slide

Iago the sensationalist​ - in this act 
Iago continues his assault on Othello’s overactive imagination​
He overtly suggests sexual impropriety in graphic terms: ​
“kissing in private”​
“lie with her, on her”​
“be naked with her friend in bed an hour or more, not meaning any harm”​
There dramatic irony when Iago who is the play’s most morally bankrupt character preaches about moral principles​

Slide 3 - Slide

Iago the sensationalist​ - in this act 
Iago continues his assault on Othello’s overactive imagination​
He overtly suggests sexual impropriety in graphic terms: ​
“kissing in private”​
“lie with her, on her”​
“be naked with her friend in bed an hour or more, not meaning any harm”​
There dramatic irony when Iago who is the play’s most morally bankrupt character preaches about moral principles​

Slide 4 - Slide

Othello hears exactly what Iago wants him to hear​
Othello is so overcome with anger and grief at the idea of Desdemona’s unfaithfulness that he cannot even express himself coherently; unlike the eloquent speaker of Act I.​
Iago does not just degrade women – he actively takes pleasure in degrading Othello too, literally reducing him to a quivering wreck, and inducing an epileptic fit 
What techniques does Shakespeare employ to show Othello's mental collapse? 
punctuation - em dash, exclamation marks, interrogative forms 
Repetition - "lie" 
Interrogatives = Uncertainty 
Equivocal meaning - play on words, confused definitions 
Swearing and profanity 
Fragments - incomplete sentences and fragmented thoughts 
Write a response discussing how authorial choices convey the mental collapse that Othello is suffering at this moment in the play. 


Slide 5 - Slide

Desdemona is now at the mercy of everybody else
OTHELLO: Get me some poison, Iago, 
this night. I’ll not expostulate with 
her, lest her body and beauty 
unprovide my mind again. 
This night, Iago!​
IAGO: Do it not with poison. Strangle 
her in her bed, even the bed she 
hath contaminated.

What are Othello’s fears? ​
Why does Iago suggest another method? 
How is symbolism shown in this extract? 
At the time, poison was considered a woman’s weapon as it did not require any courage to administer. ​
Othello is a trained soldier; why doesn’t he just stab her? Why do you think his first thought was poison?​

Slide 6 - Slide

Othello brought low
  • Iago must remind Othello to “be a man”, revealing the total mastery that he now holds over the once-great Othello ​
  • Othello, so recently hailed as “valiant” and “warlike”, has been entirely “unmanned” by Iago​
  • The great general now has to ask his lieutenant for advice ​
  • He no longer asserts his authority, but instead he is put in a passive state, not unlike women at that time. 
  • He is now led, as opposed to leading​

Slide 7 - Slide

Bianca confronts Cassio (again!)​
Bianca’s outburst is notable as she is the first woman so far who confronts her partner when she is displeased. ​
To us, this may seem positive but, at the time, such an outburst would reinforce stereotypes of a crude and unrefined lower class. Bianca would be seen as unruly, rather than independent. ​

For us Bianca may be of a lower social station, but she has integrity and is willing to confront issues rather than dance around them as so many of her social superiors do. ​

Slide 8 - Slide

Othello hits Desdemona 
How would this have been viewed?​ Write down your answer in your exercise book. 
Consider your answer carefully – avoid clichés or lazy generalisations. Think about:​
where this is happening​
who is present​
Othello’s motivations​
the reactions of those present​
Jacobean views on the character of Moors​
Do you think the slap is more shocking now because we are much more aware of violence against women?

Slide 9 - Slide

Othello – changed from noble general to savage wifebeater?​
His jealousy has become so overbearing that he has lost all sight of propriety and has crossed an important line ​
Othello compounds this brutal behaviour by calling Desdemona a “whore” in public, and she cannot stop weeping at this cruel treatment​
Lodovico simply cannot believe how quickly Othello has transformed. It is also a testament to how quickly jealousies can destroy a person. ​
Othello’s rapid decline also serves to heighten the tragic effect of this story. For one so great to fall so far, so quickly, is even more tragic and unexpected than if his fall happened more gradually.​

Slide 10 - Slide

We are here now

Slide 11 - Slide

The construction of a five act tragedy 
ACT ONE: setting the scene, laying out the problem
ACT TWO: plot develops, but the tragedy is not yet fixed
ACT THREE: something happens that seals the tragedy; no going back now
ACT FOUR: things unravel, and do so faster and faster
ACT FIVE: a catastrophe happens (usually deaths) and the problem at the start is resolved. Normality resumes.

Slide 12 - Slide