To us today, the word “black” carries with it a specific cluster of associations informed by history, culture, stereotypes, and literature. Othello may have started in conversation with Shakespeare’s definition of blackness, but today, he speaks with ours. A much more interesting question, really, is: Why is Othello black? Why did Shakespeare write a domestic tragedy about jealousy, and make the husband a Moor? Is Othello’s race a canard, or is it the key to unlocking the play’s deeper meanings? Would you believe the answer to all of this might involve pirates — (Isaac Butler, Slate)
Post was last modified on 20 Nov 2015 7:22 pm
Rewatching ST:DS9 After the recap of last week's "In Purgatory's Shadow," we see the Defiant,…
Rewatching ST:DS9 Kira helps Odo re-adjust to life as a shape-shifter, obliviously but brutally friendzoning…
Rewatching ST:DS9 In a cave (again with the caves) Sisko, in civilian clothes, seeks an…