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Informationen zum Autor Edward Pechter has taught at universities in the U. S., England, and Canada and is Distinguished Professor Emeritus at Concordia University (Montreal) and Adjunct Professor of English at the University of Victoria (British Columbia). His books include Dryden's Classical Theory of Literature , What Was Shakespeare? , Textual and Theatrical Shakespeare (Iowa, 1996), Othello: A Norton Critical Edition , and Shakespeare Studies Today: Romanticism Lost . Klappentext During the past twenty years or so, Othello has become the Shakespearean tragedy that speaks most powerfully to our contemporary concerns. Focusing on race and gender (and on class, ethnicity, sexuality, and nationality), the play talks about what audiences want to talk about. Yet at the same time, as refracted through Iago, it forces us to hear what we do not want to hear; like the characters in the play, we become trapped in our own prejudicial malice and guilt. Zusammenfassung During the past twenty years or so! Othello has become the Shakespearean tragedy that speaks most powerfully to our contemporary concerns. In this stimulating study! Edward Pechter describes the play's design and effects in a way that accounts for its extraordinary power to engage the interests of audiences and readers not just in our time but throughout history.