8 research outputs found

    Othello the Traveller

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    In this study, I employ Francis Bacon's concept of simulation, or 'false profession,' to discuss Othello the traveller and the significance of his penchant for telling wondrous tales. Defined by Bacon as 'when a man industriously and expressly feigns and pretends to be that he is not' (Essays VI.19-20), simulation is a kind of affirmative untruth in which perpetrators invent false materials, embellish their achievements or exaggerate their talents in order to achieve self-promotional goals - actions akin to padding one's resumé today. Bacon terms this calculated mis-representation of the self a 'vice' that reveals to discerning auditors that which it would conceal, namely, faults or weaknesses in the teller (VI.20). Contradictions in Othello's marvellous truth-claims (e.g., about his past, his sword, his 'magical' handkerchief) expose a myth-making process by which, paradoxically, he overstates his foreign-ness in order to gain European admirers. In short, Othello does not fear being other; he fears not being other enough. Using travellers' tales and moving accounts of the 'battles, sieges, fortunes' that he has passed (1.3.131-32), Othello markets himself to Venice as culturally exotic and militarily indispensable, qualities which are ultimately revealed to have been overstated. This article contextualizes Othello using contemporary plays featuring that emerging figure of ridicule, the stock comic traveller, as well as within increasing early modern skepticism about travellers' tales, in order to propose that early audiences may have been prompted to interpret Othello's stories as narrative simulations forming a pseudo-exotic persona which secures him unwarranted prominence in Venetian society

    Raber, Karen. Animal Bodies, Renaissance Culture

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    ‘A Mad-Cap Ruffian and a Swearing Jack’: Braggart Courtship from Miles Gloriosus to The Taming of the Shrew

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    There is a generic skeleton in Petruchio’s closet. By comparing his outlandish behaviour in Shakespeare’s The Taming of the Shrew (ca 1592–94) to that of Pyrgopolinices in Plautus’s Miles Gloriosus (ca 200 BC), as well to that of English variants of the type found in Udall, Lyly, and Peele, I re-situate Petruchio as a braggart soldier. I also reconstruct a largely forgotten comic subgenre, braggart courtship, with distinctive poetic styles, subsidiary characters, narrative events, and thematic functions. Katherina’s marriage to a stranger who boasts of his abilities and bullies social inferiors raises key questions: What were the comic contexts and cultural valences of a match between a braggart and a shrew

    I Would Thy Husband Were Dead : The Merry Wives of Windsor as Mock Domestic Tragedy

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    Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/71443/1/j.1475-6757.2000.tb01169.x.pd
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