Book contents
- The Cambridge Companion to Shakespeare and Race
- The Cambridge Companion to Shakespeare and Race
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Contributors
- Note on Shakespeare Editions
- Chapter 1 Did the Concept of Race Exist for Shakespeare and His Contemporaries?
- Chapter 2 The Materials of Race
- Chapter 3 Barbarian Moors
- Chapter 4 Racist Humor and Shakespearean Comedy
- Chapter 5 Race in Shakespeare’s Histories
- Chapter 6 Race in Shakespeare’s Tragedies
- Chapter 7 Experimental Othello
- Chapter 8 Flesh and Blood
- Chapter 9 Was Sexuality Racialized for Shakespeare?
- Chapter 10 The Tempest and Early Modern Conceptions of Race
- Chapter 11 Shakespeare, Race, and Globalization
- Chapter 12 How to Think Like Ira Aldridge
- Chapter 13 What Is the History of Actors of Color Performing in Shakespeare in the UK?
- Chapter 14 Actresses of Color and Shakespearean Performance
- Chapter 15 Othello
- Chapter 16 Are Shakespeare’s Plays Racially Progressive?
- Chapter 17 How Have Post-Colonial Approaches Enriched Shakespeare’s Works?
- Chapter 18 Is It Possible to Read Shakespeare through Critical White Studies?
- Further Reading
- Index
Chapter 3 - Barbarian Moors
Documenting Racial Formation in Early Modern England
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 09 February 2021
- The Cambridge Companion to Shakespeare and Race
- The Cambridge Companion to Shakespeare and Race
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Contributors
- Note on Shakespeare Editions
- Chapter 1 Did the Concept of Race Exist for Shakespeare and His Contemporaries?
- Chapter 2 The Materials of Race
- Chapter 3 Barbarian Moors
- Chapter 4 Racist Humor and Shakespearean Comedy
- Chapter 5 Race in Shakespeare’s Histories
- Chapter 6 Race in Shakespeare’s Tragedies
- Chapter 7 Experimental Othello
- Chapter 8 Flesh and Blood
- Chapter 9 Was Sexuality Racialized for Shakespeare?
- Chapter 10 The Tempest and Early Modern Conceptions of Race
- Chapter 11 Shakespeare, Race, and Globalization
- Chapter 12 How to Think Like Ira Aldridge
- Chapter 13 What Is the History of Actors of Color Performing in Shakespeare in the UK?
- Chapter 14 Actresses of Color and Shakespearean Performance
- Chapter 15 Othello
- Chapter 16 Are Shakespeare’s Plays Racially Progressive?
- Chapter 17 How Have Post-Colonial Approaches Enriched Shakespeare’s Works?
- Chapter 18 Is It Possible to Read Shakespeare through Critical White Studies?
- Further Reading
- Index
Summary
Linking the royal Tudor archive to the Tudor/Stuart stage, this article discloses the ways the stage constructs race in the service of nation and empire. From Elizabeth I’s proclamations calling for the expulsion of ‘blackamoors’ to George Peele’s The Battle of Alcazar, English conceptions of blackness expose the multifaceted nature of racial formation in the early modern period. The construction of race in early modern England is intimately linked to nascent and emergent English imperial ambitions and dependent upon trade, traffic, and enslavement, particularly in Africa. While previous scholarship on The Battle of Alcazar has focused on the Mediterranean milieu and the seemingly elastic racial signification of the identity marker, Moor, this study shifts both the geographical and racial focus to argue that the Atlantic and Africa are significant sites of imperial interest for the English and that blackness is being discursively produced in order to signal race.
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- The Cambridge Companion to Shakespeare and Race , pp. 30 - 46Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021
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