Conversational Perversion, Implicature and Sham Cancelling in Othello

Bourne, Craig and Caddick Bourne, Emily (2018) Conversational Perversion, Implicature and Sham Cancelling in Othello. In: Routledge Companion to Shakespeare and Philosophy :. Routledge, pp. 146-160. ISBN 9781138936126
Copy

Othello demonstrates what we call ‘conversational perversions’. This is a technical term which we introduce to identify conversational behaviours which are designed to block the possibility of mutual understanding that characterises successful communication. We believe that our notion of a conversational perversion can be put to work to illuminate conversational encounters in general, but here we show, in particular, how Othello furnishes examples of conversational perversions and, in turn, how the notion of a conversational perversion can be used to articulate a major driver of the play’s narrative: Iago’s manipulation of Othello. We explain the background, Gricean communicative framework, and how it relates to our framework for thinking about perversion. We illustrate our preferred account of perversion using the examples of sexual sadism and sexual coyness. We explain how to extend this account of perversion to cover conversational coyness and sadism. Finally, we identify how Iago’s (and Othello’s) ways of communicating exemplify these conversational perversions. In the course of this, we argue that Iago can be seen as making use of a perverted treatment of conversational implicatures, which we call ‘sham cancelling’.


picture_as_pdf
CB_AAM.pdf
subject
Submitted Version

View Download

EndNote BibTeX Reference Manager Refer Atom Dublin Core RIOXX2 XML OpenURL ContextObject in Span MODS METS Data Cite XML MPEG-21 DIDL OpenURL ContextObject HTML Citation ASCII Citation
Export

Downloads