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The Mercy Trap: How Shakespeare Exposed the Cruelest Weapon of the Powerful

Why Four Centuries of English Literature Have Downplayed the Playwright’s Most Uncomfortable Truth—That Forgiveness Is Often Demanded Only of the Defeated For over four centuries, Shakespeare has been taught as a universal genius whose plays transcend politics. But a darker, suppressed reading reveals something else: a playwright who systematically exposed how the powerful weaponize mercy against the powerless. In The Merchant of Venice, Shylock is offered “forgiveness” only after being stripped of his wealth, his daughter, and his faith—and forced to convert. In Othello, the Moorish general internalizes Venetian racism until he destroys himself. In The Tempest, Caliban curses the colonizer who taught him language, then is forced into submission. These outsiders share a tragic pattern: they react logically to years of abuse, demand justice, and are then punished for their “revenge”—while their tormentors call the punishment “mercy.” Mainstream literary education d...

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