What Would You Say Is : Othello
What Would You Say Is : Othello
d) Can you draw any conclusions about how ideas of femininity and masculinity come into
existence?
In the 21st Century, we live in a culture and a society where a broad spectrum of different kinds
of male and female behaviour are welcomed and celebrated. Think how tricky, for example, it would have
been for people like Dale Winton or Graham Norton to have become mainstream even as recently as 25
or 30 years ago. There seems, over recent years, to have been an easing up on the expectation that
women must be, or are automatically, feminine and men must be, or are automatically, masculine. We
might think that we are right to feel suspicious of the concepts of “feminine” and “masculine”; that they
can be used to impose on us expectations of certain kinds of behaviours we choose not to display. How
would you, as a 21stC teenager, feel if you were accused of behaving in an ‘unladylike’ fashion, for
example; or of displaying ‘ungentlemanly’ conduct? Is it advisable to treat such ideas completely without
irony?
We could argue, then, that contemporary culture tends to use the concepts of masculinity and
femininity in a self-conscious and self-aware manner. People are attuned to the fact that they can choose how
to project themselves. Thus someone might want to go out “looking girly” or “acting macho” for just one
evening. It is not unreasonable today to expect that your behaviour one evening as a “girly” will be read as
voluntary, and that the next day you might go play football with impunity about any “contradictions”.
Now think how recently this difference has come about. It is not difficult to see that for women
in earlier centuries, displaying behaviour which contravened definitions of ‘womanhood’ would have been
far less acceptable. Why is it that Rosalind in As You Like It has to dress up as a man before she can exert
any authority on her community? Or Portia in The Merchant of Venice? Why does the strident
Volumnia in Coriolanus cause such terror? For the latter case, it is due at least in part to the fact that she,
along with Lear’s daughters Regan and Goneril, contravenes expectations of how women should behave.
Rosalind and Portia could never bring about the conclusions they engineer if they remained dressed as
women throughout the play. Their temporary power is located in the fact that people think they are men.
They live their lives controlled by social expectations of how they will behave as women.
Her thesis:
• That you are female or male is a biological fact
• But femininity and masculinity are artificially invented cultural and social constructs. (For
example, for 19thC Turkish women, the more you weighed, the more attractive you were
considered to be).
• To be feminist is to have a certain political attitude. (This is small ‘p’ politics: the power
structures that are built into inter-personal relationships).
Therefore your sex is a biological fact but your gender is a social construct. This is a term that may
prove very useful to us in reading the play. So let’s turn our attention now back to it.
If we are happy to agree (for the sake of argument, if nothing else) that femininity and masculinity
are artificial concepts that are constructed by societies and then, through a variety of means presented to
us as if they were natural – and given the fact that one of those means is written and spoken
language – we should, in theory be able to deconstruct how Desdemona, Emilia and Bianca are
represented in the play. We should be able to look at the language that is used about them, to
them and by them and see if we can analyse a) what is expected of each woman as a woman and b)
therefore, what versions of femininity are represented in the play.
Iago Look to your house, your daughter and your bags! I.i.81
Iago She must change for youth; when she is sated with his body she
will find the error of her choice…If sanctimony and a frail vow
between an erring barbarian and a super-subtle Venetian be not
too hard for my wits and all the tribe of hell… I.iii. 335-345
Iago He hath a person and a smooth dispose
To be suspected, framed to make women false… I.iii.379-80
ACT TWO
What additions can you make to your observations from the developments in Act Two?
Cassio O, behold,
The riches of the ship is come on shore!
You men of Cyprus, let her have your knees.
Hail to thee, lady! And the grace of heaven,
Before, behind thee, and on every hand,
Enwheel thee round. II.i.82-6
Iago Mark me with what violence she first loved the Moor but for
bragging and telling her fantastical lies…Her eye must be
fed….Now for want of these required conveniences, her delicate
tenderness will find itself abused, begin to heave the gorge,
disrelish and abhor the Moor. Very nature will instruct her in it,
and compel her to some second choice
Roderigo I cannot believe that in her: she’s full of most blessed condition
Iago Blest fig’s end! The wine she drink is made of grapes…Didst
thou not see her peddle with the palm of his hand?…
Roderigo Yes, I did: but that was but courtesy
Iago Lechery, by this hand: an index and obscure prologue to the
history of lust and foul thoughts. . II.i.212-245
Iago …[H]e hath not yet made wanton the night with her, and she is
sport for Jove
Cassio She’s a most exquisite lady
Iago And I’ll warrant her full of game
Cassio Indeed she is a most fresh and delicate creature
Iago What an eye she has! Methinks it sounds a parley to
provocation
Cassio An inviting eye, and yet methinks right modest
Iago And when she speaks is it not an alarum to love?
Cassio She is indeed perfection
Iago Well, happiness to their sheets! II.iii.15-25
Iago Our general’s wife is now the general. I may say so in this
respect, for that he hath devoted and given himself up to the
contemplation, mark and denotement of her parts and graces.
Confess yourself freely to her, importune her help to out you in
your place again. She is of so free, so kind, so apt, so blest a
disposition that she holds it a vice in her goodness not to do
more than she is requested. II.iii. 290-2
Iago …For tis most easy
Th’inclining Desdemona to subdue
In any honest suit. She’s framed as fruitful
As the free elements; and then for her
To win the Moor, were’t to renounce his baptism…
His soul is so enfetter’d to her love,
That she may make, unmake, do what she list,
Even as her appetite shall play the god
With his weak function. II.iii.306-315
Judith Butler’s Gender Trouble: Feminism and the Subversion of Identity (London: Routledge,
1990)
Her thesis, building on Moi’s conclusions
• We are not hidebound to act in a certain way simply because we are male or female;
• Nonetheless, as men and women, we may make conscious but much more usually sub-
conscious choices about how to behave in certain situations, taking our cue from the specific
context.
• Therefore gender is not just a social construct; it is also a performance, because you modify and
alter it according to the particular situation you are in.
We are subconsciously aware of our audience and – and this is a generalisation – many of us will
take account of that in judging how to be, how to behave, how to perform. Aspects of this will
happen with reference to gender expectations, whether to be normative or subversive.