Inner Truth In Shakespeare's Othello

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Truth is an expectation of society. It is discourse to have and display an exorbitant amount of honesty. However, perceptions of truth are shaped by an individual's internal truth as they adhere to societal discourse in their own way. The expectations held by society become warped by individuals who endeavour to abide by their own inner truth, thus consequently neglecting what is the true discourse. The alliance of a person's inner truth with society can change, as demonstrated by Shakespeare in Othello. Descriptive language is employed in "his soul is so enfettered to her love" to demonstrate that the protagonist's is initial bound to his wife through love. Othello's inner truth is constituted by love, which in turn influences his actions. Actions are influenced by the words of others, specifically men, as …show more content…
This demonstrates how societal pressures on inner truths invoke involuntary responses as individuals are shaped by their interpretations, consequently showing how internal truths change. The imagery metaphor of "My heart is turned to stone" exhibits how an individual's beliefs can change, thus consequently altering their morals as further shown through the strong emotive juxtaposition of "Yet she must die". This demonstrates two conflicting internal truths, as the yet implies hesitation whereas the must implies urgency. Othello's inner truth dictates that the only way for justice to be had is to kill his apparently unfaithful wife. By adhering to the truth of men being more trustworthy than women, an innocent life was lost. By abiding to inner truth, an individual loses their sense of moral righteousness. Their perspective is skewed and shaped by internal beliefs that oppose societal discourse. Truth is an internal battle of morality between what an individual perceives as right and what is the accepted

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