This dissertation is a comparative and transnational study of the techniques of racial impersonation used by white performers to represent black Afro-diasporic people in early modern England, Spain, and France. The racialization of blackness that took place in England at the turn of the sixteenth century has been well studied over the course of the last thirty years. This dissertation expands English early modern race scholarship in new directions by revealing the existence of a multi-directional circulation of racial ideas, lexemes, and performance techniques that led to the development of a vivid trans-European stage idiom of blackness across national borders in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. While early modern race scholarship ...
This dissertation is a comparative study of early modern English and Spanish literature and historic...
My dissertation examines with the portrayal of the black female in two eighteenth-century German dra...
This dissertation examines depictions of queerness in early modern drama (1550-1700) that complicate...
This dissertation, "Moors, Mulattos, and Post-Racial Problems: Rethinking Racialization in Early Mod...
Copyright © 2017 The Author. Examining William Shakespeare’s Titus Andronicus, William Heminge's The...
This dissertation writes a premodern history of race as an alternative literary history of comedy. T...
Examining the trope of Blackness in the English Renaissance, the dissertation uncovers an early and ...
In “Reassessing Race: Exploring the Construction of Identity and Social Hierarchies on the Early Mod...
International audienceHow does the performance of blackness reframe issues of race, class, gender, a...
This dissertation examines sound, and its embodied articulation through music and movement, as I con...
This thesis attempts to expose stereotypologies of black African skin as performed on the Shakespear...
This dissertation looks at the connection between Heliodorus's fifth-century prose romance, An Aethi...
In this dissertation, I examine specifically how and why historical narratives of African American t...
Under the shadow of slavery, skin color played a vital role in determining social relations within c...
This thesis examines the often overlooked and consistently maligned African/black female figure in 1...
This dissertation is a comparative study of early modern English and Spanish literature and historic...
My dissertation examines with the portrayal of the black female in two eighteenth-century German dra...
This dissertation examines depictions of queerness in early modern drama (1550-1700) that complicate...
This dissertation, "Moors, Mulattos, and Post-Racial Problems: Rethinking Racialization in Early Mod...
Copyright © 2017 The Author. Examining William Shakespeare’s Titus Andronicus, William Heminge's The...
This dissertation writes a premodern history of race as an alternative literary history of comedy. T...
Examining the trope of Blackness in the English Renaissance, the dissertation uncovers an early and ...
In “Reassessing Race: Exploring the Construction of Identity and Social Hierarchies on the Early Mod...
International audienceHow does the performance of blackness reframe issues of race, class, gender, a...
This dissertation examines sound, and its embodied articulation through music and movement, as I con...
This thesis attempts to expose stereotypologies of black African skin as performed on the Shakespear...
This dissertation looks at the connection between Heliodorus's fifth-century prose romance, An Aethi...
In this dissertation, I examine specifically how and why historical narratives of African American t...
Under the shadow of slavery, skin color played a vital role in determining social relations within c...
This thesis examines the often overlooked and consistently maligned African/black female figure in 1...
This dissertation is a comparative study of early modern English and Spanish literature and historic...
My dissertation examines with the portrayal of the black female in two eighteenth-century German dra...
This dissertation examines depictions of queerness in early modern drama (1550-1700) that complicate...