Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W91048103> ?p ?o ?g. }
Showing items 1 to 84 of
84
with 100 items per page.
- W91048103 endingPage "393" @default.
- W91048103 startingPage "367" @default.
- W91048103 abstract "Felt Absences: The Stage Properties of Othello's Handkerchief Andrew Sofer Desdemona's handkerchief makes its first appearance in Shakespeare's source, Giraldi Cinthio's Hecatommithi. According to Cinthio, it is a handkerchief embroidered most delicately in the Moorish fashion, which the Moor had given her [Disdemona] and which was treasured by the Lady and her husband too.1 Cinthio's handkerchief contains no magic in its web; it is, rather, a crude plot device whose utility depends upon a string of chance events.2 By contrast, there is nothing coincidental in Shakespeare 's dramatic embroidering of Cinthio's lurid pulp. In performance , Othello's handkerchief exerts an uncanny power over both characters and audience, and it propels the action as it repeatedly emerges in the right place at the wrong time. It seems almost to bend the characters to its own enigmatic will. How do we account for the handkerchief's extraordinary grip on the audience's experience of Othello! Certainly no performance of the play can occur without it. When lago tells Roderigo that we work by wit and not by witchcraft, he may not, strictly speaking, be accurate.3 Without the magic handkerchief, Iago's lies would not stick; the drama would be literally and figuratively unstageable. In its three brief appearances, the handkerchief draws the six characters it touches—Othello, Desdemona, Emilia, lago, Cassio, Bianca—into its own repetitive story, a story which begins in love and ends in death. As if to fulfill the sibyl's prophecy of doom, by the play's end the first three characters are dead, the fourth faces torture and death, the fifth is wounded, and the sixth is in prison, where (as a prostitute jailed under military law for the suspected murder of a high-ranking officer) her prospects for survival are dim. In hindsight, Bianca's initial wariness regarding the handkerchief seems justified. But the phrase she uses to describe it is peculiar: 367 368Comparative Drama O Cassio, whence came this? This is some token from a newer friend. To the felt absence now I feel a cause. Is't come to this? Well, well. (3.4.174-77) In context we can understand this speech in two ways. Bianca interprets the handkerchief as an incriminating sign, concrete evidence of a woman for whose sake Cassio has been neglecting her (some token from a newer friend), but she speaks more truly than she knows. Bianca herself is the latest cause—the latest link in the chain—animating the handkerchief's felt absence : its paradoxical ability to be at once present, felt, corporeal , yet also somehow absent, elusive, lost. We begin to disentangle the handkerchief's magic in the web (3.4.65) once we see that, from a phenomenological perspective, the peculiarity of stage properties is that they both are and are not themselves. Oscillating between sign and thing, props are felt absences that draw our attention simultaneously to their signifying function— Bianca's word token simply means a sign—and to their materiality (felt is of course a particular fabric). Thus the handkerchief is at once a token—a signifier which points to something absent, beyond itself, like Bianca's fictitious minx—and a talisman , an object that possesses (or seems to possess) magical qualities inherently bound up in its work.4 The handkerchief's double status as sign and thing explains why, as Bert O. States has persuasively argued, we must supplement a purely semiotic approach to stage objects with a phenomenological one in a kind of binocular vision that allows us to see them both as signs for something else and as nothing but themselves.5 Following States's lead, I wish to supplement the many accounts of the handkerchief's symbolism with a phenomenological description of its magic. Bracketing the question of whether the handkerchief's magic (or magic in general) exists outside the confines of the playhouse, I shall instead describe how the handkerchief appears to consciousness—both that of the characters and of the audience—as the play unfolds in performance .6 The handkerchief is not merely a sign but a performer in the play's action, and its physical movements and..." @default.
- W91048103 created "2016-06-24" @default.
- W91048103 creator A5028353278 @default.
- W91048103 date "1997-01-01" @default.
- W91048103 modified "2023-10-17" @default.
- W91048103 title "Felt Absences: The Stage Properties of Othello's Handkerchief" @default.
- W91048103 cites W1491500669 @default.
- W91048103 cites W1498662212 @default.
- W91048103 cites W1520246494 @default.
- W91048103 cites W1537640319 @default.
- W91048103 cites W1563714527 @default.
- W91048103 cites W1571191814 @default.
- W91048103 cites W1983713656 @default.
- W91048103 cites W1983940011 @default.
- W91048103 cites W2002574213 @default.
- W91048103 cites W2019118548 @default.
- W91048103 cites W2024997395 @default.
- W91048103 cites W2034969723 @default.
- W91048103 cites W2047182118 @default.
- W91048103 cites W2092386491 @default.
- W91048103 cites W2100210120 @default.
- W91048103 cites W2337830571 @default.
- W91048103 cites W2475214380 @default.
- W91048103 cites W2479890387 @default.
- W91048103 cites W2595190807 @default.
- W91048103 cites W2737691526 @default.
- W91048103 cites W2795887683 @default.
- W91048103 cites W2796064078 @default.
- W91048103 cites W2797059791 @default.
- W91048103 cites W2797419037 @default.
- W91048103 cites W647922821 @default.
- W91048103 cites W659189023 @default.
- W91048103 cites W2994168682 @default.
- W91048103 doi "https://doi.org/10.1353/cdr.1997.0021" @default.
- W91048103 hasPublicationYear "1997" @default.
- W91048103 type Work @default.
- W91048103 sameAs 91048103 @default.
- W91048103 citedByCount "28" @default.
- W91048103 countsByYear W910481032018 @default.
- W91048103 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W91048103 hasAuthorship W91048103A5028353278 @default.
- W91048103 hasConcept C107038049 @default.
- W91048103 hasConcept C111472728 @default.
- W91048103 hasConcept C121332964 @default.
- W91048103 hasConcept C124952713 @default.
- W91048103 hasConcept C136815107 @default.
- W91048103 hasConcept C138885662 @default.
- W91048103 hasConcept C142362112 @default.
- W91048103 hasConcept C2777704519 @default.
- W91048103 hasConcept C2780362631 @default.
- W91048103 hasConcept C523419034 @default.
- W91048103 hasConcept C62520636 @default.
- W91048103 hasConceptScore W91048103C107038049 @default.
- W91048103 hasConceptScore W91048103C111472728 @default.
- W91048103 hasConceptScore W91048103C121332964 @default.
- W91048103 hasConceptScore W91048103C124952713 @default.
- W91048103 hasConceptScore W91048103C136815107 @default.
- W91048103 hasConceptScore W91048103C138885662 @default.
- W91048103 hasConceptScore W91048103C142362112 @default.
- W91048103 hasConceptScore W91048103C2777704519 @default.
- W91048103 hasConceptScore W91048103C2780362631 @default.
- W91048103 hasConceptScore W91048103C523419034 @default.
- W91048103 hasConceptScore W91048103C62520636 @default.
- W91048103 hasIssue "3" @default.
- W91048103 hasLocation W910481031 @default.
- W91048103 hasOpenAccess W91048103 @default.
- W91048103 hasPrimaryLocation W910481031 @default.
- W91048103 hasRelatedWork W1992565761 @default.
- W91048103 hasRelatedWork W2133267947 @default.
- W91048103 hasRelatedWork W2321756657 @default.
- W91048103 hasRelatedWork W2491513094 @default.
- W91048103 hasRelatedWork W2748952813 @default.
- W91048103 hasRelatedWork W2798221657 @default.
- W91048103 hasRelatedWork W2899084033 @default.
- W91048103 hasRelatedWork W2993159568 @default.
- W91048103 hasRelatedWork W3167152720 @default.
- W91048103 hasRelatedWork W4366573258 @default.
- W91048103 hasVolume "31" @default.
- W91048103 isParatext "false" @default.
- W91048103 isRetracted "false" @default.
- W91048103 magId "91048103" @default.
- W91048103 workType "article" @default.