Richard Brome’s The English Moor (1637) is treated traditionally as a play about race, since the crux of the play’s main plot relies upon the application and removal of black face paint. This article, however, repositions the play critically within a social discourse that is focused upon the management of the female body: the discourse of cosmetics. Creating a context for the social debate about cosmetics, the article suggests that the play is concerned more with the materiality of face paint and its relationship to the moral condition of the women (Millicent and Phyllis) wearing makeup. Without denying the play’s preoccupation with racial Otherness that blackness arouses, the article questions the centrality of race and locates at its cent...
Scholarly discussions of race in Othello have almost exclusively focused on the eponymous character....
This dissertation examines the phenomenon of women who disguise themselves as men in three 17th cent...
In her article, Anna Fåhraeus contextualizes race within multiple images of social horror in Thomas ...
Richard Brome’s The English Moor (1637) is treated traditionally as a play about race, since the cru...
Richard Brome’s The English Moor (1637) is treated traditionally as a play about race, since the cru...
This paper purposes to investigate the multiple meanings of the black and white opposition which lie...
This paper purposes to investigate the multiple meanings of the black and white opposition which lie...
Examining William Shakespeare’s Titus Andronicus, William Heminge’s The Fatal Contract, and Elkanah ...
Examines the painted body of the actor on the early modern stageInventions of the Skin illuminates a...
This poster presents a work-in-progress: a comparative analysis of three versions of the play Americ...
The female figures in Shakespeare's comedies, such as Rosalind in As You Like It and Viola in Twelft...
At the beginning of The Weeding of Covent Garden, a builder and a potential homebuyer wax eloquent a...
After World War II, Shakespearean critics often found ‘race’ to be an incidental discourse in (c 0.1...
Early scholars of blackface minstrelsy have often over-simplified and rebuked nineteenth-century Ame...
My paper is about The City Wit (1629-1632), a play by Richard Brome. This city comedy revolves aroun...
Scholarly discussions of race in Othello have almost exclusively focused on the eponymous character....
This dissertation examines the phenomenon of women who disguise themselves as men in three 17th cent...
In her article, Anna Fåhraeus contextualizes race within multiple images of social horror in Thomas ...
Richard Brome’s The English Moor (1637) is treated traditionally as a play about race, since the cru...
Richard Brome’s The English Moor (1637) is treated traditionally as a play about race, since the cru...
This paper purposes to investigate the multiple meanings of the black and white opposition which lie...
This paper purposes to investigate the multiple meanings of the black and white opposition which lie...
Examining William Shakespeare’s Titus Andronicus, William Heminge’s The Fatal Contract, and Elkanah ...
Examines the painted body of the actor on the early modern stageInventions of the Skin illuminates a...
This poster presents a work-in-progress: a comparative analysis of three versions of the play Americ...
The female figures in Shakespeare's comedies, such as Rosalind in As You Like It and Viola in Twelft...
At the beginning of The Weeding of Covent Garden, a builder and a potential homebuyer wax eloquent a...
After World War II, Shakespearean critics often found ‘race’ to be an incidental discourse in (c 0.1...
Early scholars of blackface minstrelsy have often over-simplified and rebuked nineteenth-century Ame...
My paper is about The City Wit (1629-1632), a play by Richard Brome. This city comedy revolves aroun...
Scholarly discussions of race in Othello have almost exclusively focused on the eponymous character....
This dissertation examines the phenomenon of women who disguise themselves as men in three 17th cent...
In her article, Anna Fåhraeus contextualizes race within multiple images of social horror in Thomas ...