
‘Rub Him About the Temples’: Othello, Disability, and the Failures of Care
Author(s) -
Justin M. Shaw
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
early theatre
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2293-7609
pISSN - 1206-9078
DOI - 10.12745/et.22.2.3997
Subject(s) - friendship , character (mathematics) , aesthetics , praxis , sociology , race (biology) , disability studies , art , gender studies , epistemology , philosophy , social science , geometry , mathematics
Focusing on how race and disability deconstruct and expose the facades of friendship, this article explores the ethical differences in models of care in Shakespeare's Othello. It examines the networks of care surrounding the character of Othello – particularly his interactions with Cassio – and demonstrates how, by revealing the many pretensions and failures of relationship, the play develops a theory and praxis for ethical caring that attends to the complexity of a black and disabled character. The play, this essay argues, finally presents a solution to the problem of care in the symbolic and material web of the ancestral handkerchief.