1st Edition

Shakespeare and the Cultivation of Difference Race and Conduct in the Early Modern World

By Patricia Akhimie Copyright 2018
232 Pages
by Routledge

232 Pages
by Routledge

232 Pages
by Routledge

Shakespeare and the Cultivation of Difference reveals the relationship between racial discrimination and the struggle for upward social mobility in the early modern world. Reading Shakespeare’s plays alongside contemporaneous conduct literature - how-to books on self-improvement - this book demonstrates the ways that the pursuit of personal improvement was accomplished by the simultaneous... Read more

CONTENTS





 



 



LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS



INTRODUCTION 1



CHAPTER 1 Othello, Blackness and the Process of Marking X



CHAPTER 2 "Bruised with Adversity": Race and the Slave/Servant



Body in The Comedy of Errors X



CHAPTER 3 "Hard-Handed Men’: Manual Labor and Imaginative



Capacity in A Midsummer Night’s Dream X



CHAPTER 4 "Fill Our Skins with Pinches": Cultivating



the Colonial Body in The Tempest X



CODA Pedestrian Check X



BIBLIOGRAPHY X



Biography

Patricia Akhimie is Assistant Professor of English at Rutgers University-Newark. She is co-editor of Travel and Travail: Early Modern Women, English Drama, and the Wider World (University of Nebraska Press), with Bernadette Andrea. Her research has been supported by the Ford Foundation, the John Carter Brown Library, and the National Sporting Library.





   



"Richly embedded in the historical discourses of conduct, from ars apodemica to angling, and brilliantly attuned to the legacy of indelible difference in the political present, Shakespeare and the Cultivation of Difference is a book that will shake up the ¿eld."

- Professor Ellen MacKay, Recent Studies in Tudor and Stuart Drama