Premium Content She's Come Undone: Did Desdemona's Determination Dictate Her Death?
By Sheridan Gayer - January 21, 2003
Shakespeare is often recognized for a contributing to the canon in a way that causes the adage "there is nothing new under the sun" to ring true. His talent for developing old literary and mythic plots and themes in order to address contemporary British issues such as monarchy, religion, war, race, and the role of women in society is most often…
This excerpt of the essay is provided for free. To read the complete essay of 1932 words or to get access to our full library of Literature Essays, please subscribe below or log in if you are already subscribed.
Join Now - Choose a Membership Level
GradeSaver provides access to quizzes, 2394 literature essays, 586 sample college application essays and ad-free surfing in this premium content, "Members Only" section of the site! Membership includes a 10% discount on all editing orders.
We have been mentioned in the Washington Post, the Economist, and many other papers around the world for our exceptional essays. GradeSaver has reviewed each essay for quality; these essays are the very best on the Internet and many have been written by students of Ivy League colleges.
| 3-Day Trial | $3.95 * |
| 15-Day Trial | $4.95 * |
| 30-Day Trial | $6.95 * |
| 1 Month Membership | $8.95 |
| 3 Month Membership | $24.95 |
| 12 Month Membership | $99.95 |
* After your trial period, you will be billed a monthly fee of $6.95 with the option to cancel at any time. Questions? Read our FAQ.
Existing Users
Related Content for Othello
- Study Guide for Othello
- E-Text for Othello
- Forum for Othello
- Purchase Othello and Related Material
- Biography of William Shakespeare
- Racism in Othello
- The Fun of the Hunt in Othello
- Honesty to Speak: Speech and Silence in "Othello"
- Honest Iago
- To Be in the World But Not of the World: Aye, There's the Rub
- Three Themes of Othello
- It is Not Words That Shake Me Thus
- She's Come Undone: Did Desdemona's Determination Dictate Her Death?
- Analysis of Othello
- Character Analysis of Iago From Shakespeare's Othello
- The Promised End of Othello
- Sir Anthony Babington: A Possible Source for Iago in Shakespeare's Othello
- Imagination and Virtue in Othello
- Naivety and Credible Evidence: Othello's Tragic Handkerchief
- Transcendence Through Duality: A Cinematic Comparison of Othello's Final Scene
- Iago and Opposition
- Iago: Influential Villain or Powerless Character of Fiction?
- Shakespeare's Use of Language in Othello
- A Sacrificial Death
- Unity in Shakespeare's Tragedies
- Inevitability and the Nature of Shakespeare's Tragedies
- Witchy Women: Female Magic and Otherness in Western Literature
- Iago and Edmund: The Silence and Complexity of Evil
- Power Struggles
- Responsibility for Tragedy in Othello and Macbeth
- Horned Soldiers
- Gender Roles and Sexual Politics in Othello
- The Will of Desdemona
- Desdemona and the Handkerchief in Othello
- Language and Othello's Decline
- The Significance of Stories in Othello and The Tempest
- Where's The Motivation?
- To Assert Eternal Providence: The Religion of Iago
- “Explore how Shakespeare portrays Othello in Act V Scene II, focusing on this scene and relating it to the play as a whole”
- Honor is of Essence
- Patience in Othello
- Iago's Isolation from Humanity



