Thursday, April 4, 2013

So this isn't all of it, but its a start

What with a couple other time consuming projects occupying my time, I finally made a breakthrough on this paper but it is still very much a work in progress.  Here is a little more than half, I will post the rest tomorrow hopefully...




Lauren Remington
Dr. Burton
English 382
22 March 2013
Following the Profits
            Although all of Shakespeare’s plays are unique in their own way, and brilliant in style and ability to cater to the masses both then and now, he does seem to have a frame or mold which has worked effectively and which also makes it possible to relate between the plays characters and ideas, particularly his use of disguises.  In his play Othello, Shakespeare, contrary to using disguises, uses the character Iago, who easily transforms himself with each character he talks to, absorbing new identity after new persona in order to reach his dark and also obscure ends.  It is never made completely plain why Iago is motivated to the deaths and despairs he causes and his chameleon like nature make him seem like lass of a human character and more like a series of personas adopted into one individual to serve a rhetorical purpose and provide plot.  Iago's change in character and ability to appease everyone he talks to is directly relatable to others of Shakespeare's characters who easily don disguises to fool their peers because his own change in character has a similar effect on his fellows.  Carl Jung, well-known personality theorist and psychologist, was a contemporary of Sigmund Freud and adopted some of Freud’s ideas to develop a theory in which the parts and attitudes of the unconscious identity, instead of battling each other to take control, are working to have unity within the individual.  Years before Jung’s time, Shakespeare’s character Iago is a negative personification of his theories and the battling that occurs between Jung’s unconscious and contentious attitudes.
            Jung’s theories revolve around the idea that the different levels of the individual battle each other in order to “reside” in an equilibrium, making up an individual’s personality.  As a personality theorist and a contemporary of Freud, Jung’s theories constitute and important contribution to the psychological community and the varied understandings of the human psyche.  Iago is a pivotal character of Shakespeare’s Othello.  As Jung’s theories are applied to the interpretation of his character, an interesting dynamic arises revealing how these varying factors of personality come together, but are revealed openly in his figure.  Iago is the character that manufactures the tragedy for shady motivations.  Not shady in the figurative sense of dark, although they were dark, but shady in that is altogether unclear what truly drive him in his actions.  At one point, he cites Othello’s sleeping with his wife and at another; he is driven by his jealousy of Othello’s rank and position.  Either way, he behaves independent of any emphasis on his motivations and what drives him to his acts of torment on Othello.
            Iago fits into Jung’s theory specifically in the archetypes that dominate the individual.  These archetypes are less biological and more “spiritual” in nature.  Iago, as a character, seems almost to get lost within layer upon layer of varying motivations and characters that he absorbs as he turns from individual to individual whom he needs to help him reach his own ends.  These archetypes that Jung describes fit into the role that Iago plays and Iago, among them, seems to get lost within the layers of personas. 
            The unconscious attitudes fighting for prominence are physically portrayed in Iago’s interactions.  Jung’s archetypes or unconscious is “a universal thought form or predisposition to respond to the world in certain ways,” (Engler 74).  Iago seems to have internalized a number of responses and personas which Jung further refers to as “the social role that one assumes in society and one’s understanding of it,” (74).  Iago is a selfish self-centered character who functions in society through the scope of things that will best benefit him.  Iago’s persona is so varying that it is hard to pin down.  At one point in speaking to Roderigo he states, “Were I the Moor, I would not be Iago. / In following him I follow but myself” (I.i.57-59).  This exemplifies the twisted nature of his character reflected in the cunning twists of his language.  He openly seems to admit to his duplicity further in this dialogue saying, "I am not what I am" and by being open about this, is purposefully more cryptic in the way he communicates it (I.i.65).  The first line in particular "Were I the Moor I would not be Iago," says very little about him in all actuality while appearing to be communicating much.  Iago openly declares that his persona is not true to the definition that Jung describes.  His “persona” is a farce, deeply set up and layered by adopted archetypes in order to confuse and dominate his peers.
            Iago’s behavior sets up a perplexing and troubling perspective on Jung’s theories on personality.  If assumptions are drawn that Iago is a reflection of true human behavior, where is it that the character can truly be defined?  Iago is layer upon layer twisted up on confused motivations and lacking in continuity.  He is a villain, suited to the needs of Shakespeare and his use of stock characters to fit the frame of his tragedies.  Iago in particular, however, constitutes an interesting connection between reality and drama.  In the midst of declaring openly his own deception, Iago does assert that his actions are an illustration of who his truly is by saying, “For when is my judge, not I for love and duty, / But seeming so for my peculiar end” (I.i.59-60).  


As far as this draft goes, I am working on incorporating the scholarly sources for my research on Jung as well as compiling a complete bibliography and totally bringing my idea all together.  

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