Betrayal in Fiction and Drama
Betrayal
Throughout the conflicts of fiction and the dramatic undertones of plays, the notion of betrayal always remains a common and tragic theme. Betrayal itself has mostly been the causation of motives such as love, jealousy, anger, and hatred. As one further delves into the depths of the word within literature, one finds that betrayal itself leads to an alarming number of characters seeking justice, retribution, peace from the traumatic events, and detachment from one's betrayers. The word has become such a heavy burden amongst betrayers, and such a drastic occurrence on the victims that it even has its own quaint little circle in the depths of Dante's Inferno (Jackson, 2000). William Shakespeare's Othello and Alexandre Dumas' The Count of Monte Cristo depict the motives and results of betrayal: as the betrayers, Iago and Danglars have become catalysts for the actions of their victims; namely Othello and Edmond Dantes.
However, by what forms does betrayal rear its unattractive head? One has to immediately characterize this theme before one further delves into the motives and subjections that Shakespeare and Dumas writes through their characters. To be sure, betrayal comes at a different motive and ends with a high price in most instances. In the Christian faith, it is Lucifer who betrays God with an uprising. It is Judas who betrays Jesus into the hands of the dissenting priests. It is Cain who betrays his brother Abel in the Bible by killing him. The three characters mentioned have all betrayed through different motives: Lucifer through love (a perceptive lack thereof), Judas through greed, and Cain through jealousy. All three were punished as the stories demand: Lucifer is banished into Hell and becomes ruler, and Cain and Judas ultimately land in the final and most tortuous circle of Hell (Dante, 2000).
It comes to stand, then, that even in the beginning forms of literature, betrayal acts as a major part in motive and consequence. It is the driving force in the breakage of trust within characters. It is the seed of distrust and the displays of violence. In Jackson's study of betrayal in Jane Austen's works, he defines betrayal as "an assault on the integrity of the individuals, affecting the capacity to trust, undermining confidence in judgment, and contracting the possibilities of the world by increasing distrust and skepticism" (Jackson, 2000). At further reading through Shakespeare's Othello and Dumas' The Count of Monte Cristo, it becomes evident that these forms manifest themselves through betrayal.
The Count of Monte Cristo by Alexandre Dumas (1844)
Most who have read The Count of Monte Cristo find the main theme to be that of vengeance. True enough, the story follows a particularly unlucky Edmond Dantes, who -- having been wrongfully thrown into the Chateau d'If through precarious acts of betrayal -- hunts his persecutors down one after the other. As the Count of Monte Cristo, Dantes dishes out the dish best served cold: vengeance. Yet how does one get to this point in the book without mentioning the process with which Edmond experienced in order to reach this height of the need for retribution? Clearly, the answer falls upon betrayal for both result of motive and cause for justice.
Dantes has had a lucky life at the novel's beginning. The favorite first mate and subsequent heir to the Pharaon and the beloved fiance of Mercedes, the innocent, good-natured Dantes had everything he could ask for. That is, until his great luck lands him the enmity of Danglars and Fernand Mondego. Danglars and Fernand covet different parts of Dantes' life: Danglars covets the Pharaon and Fernand covets Mercedes. Both men are driven to different forms of jealousy, yet both cases lead to the same result; Danglars and Fernand go out of their way to write the incriminating letter that sends Dantes to the Chateau d'If. At the time, Danglars was a former shipmate of Dantes', and Fernand a former...
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