In Act 5, scene 2 Shakespeare stages a
femicide: the murder of Desdemona by Othello. In the scene Othello is torn
between two drives, the instincts of Eros and Thanatos.
In Act 5, scene 2 Shakespeare stages a
femicide: the murder of Desdemona by Othello. In the scene Othello is torn
between two drives, the instincts of Eros and Thanatos.
The murder scene from Act V of Othello contains an act of femicide: Othello kills his wife Desdemona, whom he accuses of being unfaithful. Othello acts under two basic instincts or impulses, called Eros (sexual instinct) and Thanatos (aggressive instinct). According to psychiatrist Sigmund Freud, human beings share these natural instincts with animals but the difference is that humans can (or at least should) control them, letting their “ego” prevail and suppress those instincts. Actually, it’s our subconscious to be exposed to these impulses, but there’s still our ego whose job is to try to calm them down.