Admiral
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As I see it, Shakespeares Othello is a play about the jealousy of one man, not Othello, but Iago. It is Iagos jealousy–of anyone who gets anything that seems better than that which he gets himself–which is the driving force of the play. And it is Iagos own jealousy which enables him to provoke the same feeling in others, to use them to his own advantage, or at least to their disadvantage (which to him seems to be almost the same thing). He expresses his sentiments at times throughout the play. One of the passages where it to me becomes most obvious is I.iii.382-394, and I will use this passage as my point of departure. At the start of this passage Iago has just told Roderigo to put money in his purse. When Roderigo has gone off, Iago explains to the audience that of course he is only socialising with such a fool to be able to use him “for sport and profit” (I.iii.385). The emotion Iago is able to exploit in Roderigo, is Roderiogos jealousy towards anyone who so much as touches Desdemona. At this point in the play, the sentiment seems overloaded with racism, but it later becomes clear that Roderigo is just as easily incented against Cassio, which should indicate that it is pure (or at least almost pure) jealousy he feels.
Next Iago states the fact, of which by now the reader is largely aware, that is, that he hates “the Moor”. The Arden notes quote Heilman: “the hate is prior, and a motive is then discovered” (note to line 386), concerning Iagos elaboration of this hate. I should say that an easily statable (is that a word?) motive is discovered, but that he has already given us motives for the “prior hate” in earlier statements, but that these have been less “spellt-out”. The first motive is Iagos general dislike of anyone who gets more highly rewarded than him, not regarding their