Blind Spots of Knowledge in Shakespeare and His World by Subha Mukherji;
Author:Subha Mukherji;
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: De Gruyter
Published: 2019-01-15T00:00:00+00:00
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Emiliaâs first appearance in the play is in a scene that âbristlesâ unyieldingly. This is the opening scene of the second act in Cyprusâa long scene of desultory conversation among the Venetians, as they wait on the headland for Othelloâs arrival. Desdemona is anxious and restive, and her companionsâEmilia and Iago, together with the worshipping Cassio and the inflamed Roderigoâtry to help her while away the time. The texture of this scene brilliantly captures the drift of polite social talk, what Iago calls âchronic[ling] small beerâ (2.1.160). But there is an Emilia-shaped hole in this texture, very similar to those astutely choreographed scenes in Jane Austenâusually at balls, private theatricals, or in the Upper Rooms in Bathâwhere her mousy, silent heroines are silhouetted against a background of chatter. This is how we initially get to know Catherine Moreland in Northanger Abbey or Fanny Price in Mansfield Park.
As Emilia joins this little gathering, Cassio greets her with a kiss, assuring her husband that it is merely a âshowââalthough somewhat âboldââof âcourtesyâ (2.1.99). Iago immediately absorbs Cassioâs courtesy into his own brand of bawdy: âSir, would she give you so much of her lips / As of her tongue she oft bestows on me / Youâd have enoughâ (2.1.100â102). To this Desdemona interjects, âAlas! She has no speechâ (2.1.103). Iago disagrees, for Emilia talks so much in bed that he cannot go to sleepââIn faith, too much; / I find it still, when I have list to sleepâ (2.1.103â4)âbut allows that perhaps, in front of Desdemona, Emilia âputs her tongue a little in her heart, / And chides with thinkingâ (2.1.106â7). Then, and only then, Emilia answers him: âYou have little cause to say soâ (2.1.108). The impeccable playfulness that Cassio and Desdemona have kept up so effortlessly between them has therefore been broken into twice: once by Iagoâs gratuitous and suggestive disclosures regarding Emiliaâs bedroom habits, and then by Emiliaâs words, âYou have little cause to say so.â She is the first to use the playâs most famous word, âcause,â and her smouldering quietness immediately strikes a contrary note. She directly and exclusively addresses her husband in a conversation that has so far been strenuously public. What do her words imply? She could be saying, âYou are misrepresenting me to these people because, actually, I hardly speak at all,â thereby endorsing Desdemonaâs âAlas! She has no speech.â Or, she could be picking up Iagoâs intriguing âshe ... chides with thinkingâ in order to say, âYou canât say this because you have no idea of what I think.â Either reading immediately opens up an area of darkness that is always present at the heart of the play: the realm of what another person could be thinking. It is an inwardness that is imponderable, cannot be possessed, and is therefore obscurely threatening; it later becomes Iagoâs trump card and Othelloâs greatest fear. Later in this scene, Iagoâs mock-misogynist badinage with Desdemona imagines a woman who âcould think, and neâer disclose her mindâ (2.1.156). And, after Iago has successfully aroused in Othello the desire for âocular proof â (3.
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