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Unit 3: Vocabulary from Readings 2

This list covers "The Moor in English Renaissance Drama" and "Othello on Stage and Screen."
17 words 2 learners

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Full list of words from this list:

  1. inscrutable
    difficult or impossible to understand
    What we find is not one image of the Moroccan, but many images, from the dangerously inscrutable alien to the exotically attractive ally.
  2. despot
    a cruel and oppressive dictator
    But traditional images of the Moor as black devil, Islamic infidel, or oriental despot were certainly drawn on to articulate what the traders and diplomats experienced.
  3. polemic
    a verbal or written attack, especially of a belief or dogma
    The theatrical representation of the Moor, while shaped in part by the traditional anti-Islam polemic, or the characterization of the black man as devil, also reshapes those traditions.
  4. superiority
    displaying a sense of being better than others
    Yet the representation of the Moor could also lead the dramatist and the audience beyond a comfortable sense of superiority or the superficial titillation provided by a darkly alien villain.
  5. titillate
    stimulate or excite
    Yet the representation of the Moor could also lead the dramatist and the audience beyond a comfortable sense of superiority or the superficial titillation provided by a darkly alien villain.
  6. prowess
    a superior skill learned by study and practice
    Or power could be sought in ways acceptable to society, as was the case for Othello, who could seem “fair” both within his dark exterior and within the Venetian state because of his military prowess.
  7. insidious
    working or spreading in a hidden and usually injurious way
    The audience that witnessed the struggle for self-control and the insidious powers that transform Othello would confront the destructiveness of its own collective perceptions of race, religion, and cultural difference.
  8. conception
    an abstract or general idea inferred from specific instances
    The opposition between Roman reason and the darkly feminine otherness and fertility of Egypt is but one variation on this conflict between different conceptions of power and order.
  9. exploitation
    the act of making use of and profiting from resources
    Traditional definitions of Western norms and of the others who deviated from those norms provided a groundwork for curiosity, or a base of operations for exploration and exploitation.
  10. spatial
    pertaining to the expanse in which things are located
    The Moor's difference was something established by tradition, and the Moor was a sign of spatial distance, a creature from a distant place.
  11. deviation
    a variation from the standard or norm
    It is unsettling and also exciting to feel the ground of assumptions shift, as is the case in travel, when the norm is not your norm, when dress, speech, food, and the details of life reflect a difference that places you at the margin, reduced to a sign of deviation from the norm.
  12. venerable
    profoundly honored
    Although he was the leading Othello of the period and was much praised, the only informative contemporary account of his performance in the role tells us little more than that his aspect was serious, venerable, and majestic.
  13. lithe
    moving and bending with ease
    Quick in motion as in thought; lithe and sinuous as a snake.
  14. bluff
    bluntly direct and outspoken but good-natured
    A certain bluffness (which my temperament does not afford) should be added to preserve the military flavor of the character; in this particular I fail utterly, my Iago lacks the soldierly quality.
  15. fatuous
    devoid of intelligence
    ...Othello is not so much a heroic figure—the noble Moor who gains our sympathy despite the terrible deed he performs—as a fatuous simpleton, a man given to egotistical self-dramatizing.
  16. unprepossessing
    creating an unfavorable or neutral first impression
    Still, although much in the conception could be faulted, it was widely agreed that Olivier’s acting was a triumph—a triumph won, among other things, at the expense of an unprepossessing Iago and a negligible Desdemona.
  17. negligible
    so small as to be meaningless; insignificant
    Still, although much in the conception could be faulted, it was widely agreed that Olivier’s acting was a triumph—a triumph won, among other things, at the expense of an unprepossessing Iago and a negligible Desdemona.
Created on Tue Nov 30 13:44:02 EST 2021 (updated Thu Jan 20 14:55:56 EST 2022)

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