Tuesday, October 1, 2019
A Comparison of Crime and Punishment and Othello :: comparison compare contrast essays
A Comparison of Crime and Punishment and Othello     Ã       Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã   In both Crime and Punishment and Othello there  is a theme of necessary     balance.Ã   Crime and Punishment's theme that man must be balanced in  order to     function properly is very similar to Othello's theme that, tragically,  jealousy     is destructive, even to the one that holds it.     Ã       Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã   In Crime and Punishment, Raskolnikov's extreme  intellectualism caused     him to stop functioning as a complete and balanced individual which  ultimately     cost him his freedom.Ã   For Othello, it was his extreme jealousy that  caused him     to become emotionally unbalanced, which cost him both Desdemona and his own  life.     Ã  In both cases the extremes create unbalance which ends up costing a  lot.Ã   There     is a difference, however, and that too lies in the extremes; while  Raskolnikov     is too intellectual and lacks emotion, Othello is a rage of emotions and     requires some intellect or rationality.     Ã       Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã   One stylistic device both authors used to  demonstrate this unbalance is     foreshadowing.Ã   On page 84 in Crime and Punishment, Raskolnikov says,  "If they     question me, perhaps I will simply tell.Ã   Fall to my knees and  tell."Ã   This     foreshadows Raskolnikov's confession to the police and his subsequent  sentencing     to Siberia.Ã   Raskolnikov is obviously unbalanced if he can  detachedly     hypothesize about his confession. Similarly, Desdemona's willow song     foreshadows her own death.Ã   In this way we realize Othello must be  extremely     unbalanced if his wife can foresee her own death when they are still newly  wed.     Both foreshadowed events would usually be considered as negative.Ã   The  main     difference is that while Raskolnikov's imprisonment is temporary,  Desdemona's     death is permanent.     Ã       Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã   The interesting thing about both foreshadowed  events is their irony.     While both events are usually construed as negative, good things come from  both.     Not until he has been in Siberia a year does Raskolnikov finally renounce  his     overman theory and become complete and balanced once again.Ã   Also,  Desdemona     will be able to forgive Othello and be with him throughout eternity.Ã    What makes     these happenings different is their justness.Ã   Raskolnikov was  rightfully     imprisoned for his crime, while Desdemona was unjustly murdered for a crime  she     did not commit.     Ã       Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã   Finally, both stories include a very important  epiphany. Raskolnikov's     acceptance of love and God at Sonya's feet is both similar and dissimilar  to     					    
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