1st Edition

Shakespeare and Identity in a Divided World

By Kristin M.S. Bezio Copyright 2026
316 Pages 1 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

316 Pages 1 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

316 Pages 1 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

Shakespeare and Identity in a Divided World examines some of the most pressing issues about identity and so-called identity politics in the highly polarized twenty-first century. The book uses Shakespeare’s plays and the history of sixteenth and seventeenth-century England to discuss gender, race, mental health, disability, and fatness as they were perceived in Shakespeare’s age and then... Read more

Introduction: “I’ll Drown My Book”: Reading (and Watching) Shakespeare in the Twenty-First Century

Chapter 1: Who Was William Shakespeare?: How The Bard Came to Be (or Not to Be)

Chapter 2: Leading “Ladies”: Shakespeare’s Women and Problems of Gender Inequality

Chapter 3: Real Men Show Their Scars: Toxic Masculinity in Shakespeare’s Violent Tragedies

Chapter 4: Cesario and Ganymede: Finding Transness in Shakespeare’s “Genderbenders”

Chapter 5: Slaves and Generals: Race and Displacement in Shakespeare

Chapter 6: My Wits Begin to Turn: Causes, Cures, and Care for Mental Illness in Shakespeare’s Plays

Chapter 7: Not Shaped for Sportive Tricks: Physical Disability and Fatness in Shakespeare

Epilogue: Shakespeare’s Culture Wars from the Sixteenth Century to the Twenty-First

Biography

Kristin M.S. Bezio is Professor and Associate Dean for Academic Affairs in the Jepson School of Leadership Studies at the University of Richmond. Her background is in theatre and early modern drama, and her publications include Staging Power in Tudor and Stuart History Plays (2015), The Eye of the Crown (2023), “‘Munday I Sweare Shalbee a Hollidaye’: The Politics of Anthony Munday, from Anti-Catholic Spy to Civic Pageanteer (1579–1630),” in Études Anglaises (2018), and the edited volumes William Shakespeare & 21st Century Culture, Politics, and Leadership: Bard Bites with Anthony Presti Russell (2021), and Religion and the Medieval and Early Modern Global Marketplace (2021), and Religion and the Early Modern British Marketplace (2021), both co-edited with Scott Oldenburg.