This dissertation writes a premodern history of race as an alternative literary history of comedy. This project argues that early modern generic changes in comic conventions reflect and produce a logic of race, which assign relational positions of knowingness and unknowing as naturally immutable. Renaissance comedies resembled epistemological laboratories in which to theorize the notion of knowledge itself, and the comedies of Shakespeare, Jonson, and Dekker, Middleton, and Rowley abound in theatrical technologies which create and explore differences in knowing and ignorance. Blackened skin function as a signifier of preclusion from the humanist knowledge-reservoir of “poesy”; the foreign stink wafting from a “rustic’s” tobacco-pipe signals...
This paper examines Shakespeare's handling of the issue of race in The Merchant of Venice and Othell...
This dissertation adopts the historiographic method of W.E.B Du Bois as a heuristic for analyzing th...
Reviews the Shakespeare Quarterly special issue (spring 2016), a collection of articles on different...
This dissertation writes a premodern history of race as an alternative literary history of comedy. T...
In “Reassessing Race: Exploring the Construction of Identity and Social Hierarchies on the Early Mod...
As scholars of early modern literature know, Renaissance constructions of alterity were inconsistent...
“Racial Prosthesis: Shakespearean Properties of Whiteness” explores the early modern English theater...
Examining the trope of Blackness in the English Renaissance, the dissertation uncovers an early and ...
Shakespeare and Race is a provocative new study that reveals a connection between the subject of rac...
This dissertation, "Moors, Mulattos, and Post-Racial Problems: Rethinking Racialization in Early Mod...
This dissertation is a comparative and transnational study of the techniques of racial impersonation...
This dissertation examines depictions of queerness in early modern drama (1550-1700) that complicate...
In this dissertation, I argue that the humors are a productive way to read early modern drama and th...
Traditionally in the field of aesthetics the genres of tragedy and comedy have been depicted in anti...
Copyright © 2017 The Author. Examining William Shakespeare’s Titus Andronicus, William Heminge's The...
This paper examines Shakespeare's handling of the issue of race in The Merchant of Venice and Othell...
This dissertation adopts the historiographic method of W.E.B Du Bois as a heuristic for analyzing th...
Reviews the Shakespeare Quarterly special issue (spring 2016), a collection of articles on different...
This dissertation writes a premodern history of race as an alternative literary history of comedy. T...
In “Reassessing Race: Exploring the Construction of Identity and Social Hierarchies on the Early Mod...
As scholars of early modern literature know, Renaissance constructions of alterity were inconsistent...
“Racial Prosthesis: Shakespearean Properties of Whiteness” explores the early modern English theater...
Examining the trope of Blackness in the English Renaissance, the dissertation uncovers an early and ...
Shakespeare and Race is a provocative new study that reveals a connection between the subject of rac...
This dissertation, "Moors, Mulattos, and Post-Racial Problems: Rethinking Racialization in Early Mod...
This dissertation is a comparative and transnational study of the techniques of racial impersonation...
This dissertation examines depictions of queerness in early modern drama (1550-1700) that complicate...
In this dissertation, I argue that the humors are a productive way to read early modern drama and th...
Traditionally in the field of aesthetics the genres of tragedy and comedy have been depicted in anti...
Copyright © 2017 The Author. Examining William Shakespeare’s Titus Andronicus, William Heminge's The...
This paper examines Shakespeare's handling of the issue of race in The Merchant of Venice and Othell...
This dissertation adopts the historiographic method of W.E.B Du Bois as a heuristic for analyzing th...
Reviews the Shakespeare Quarterly special issue (spring 2016), a collection of articles on different...