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1. - Critical Studies

from The Year’s Contribution To Shakespeare Studies

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 August 2022

Emma Smith
Affiliation:
University of Oxford
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Summary

Following the pulling down of the statue of slave-trader, Edward Colston, in Bristol in the summer of 2020, in response to the Black Lives Matter movement, the historian David Olusoga observed, ‘the problem isn’t the statue; it’s the pedestal’. At a similar moment, the question of Shakespeare’s function as a potential symbol of racial oppression encouraged Ayanna Thompson to ask the question, ‘Is Shakespeare a statue?’ Some of the most valuable scholarship in Shakespeare produced this year asks directly or obliquely what kind of oppressive function Shakespeare-as-statue serves, and interrogates the kind of pedestals which have placed him there.

Type
Chapter
Information
Shakespeare Survey 75
Othello
, pp. 361 - 374
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2022

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References

Works Reviewed

Acker, Faith D., First Readers of Shakespeare’s Sonnets, 1590–1790 (New York and London, 2021)Google Scholar
Barnes, Todd Landon, Shakespearean Charity and the Perils of Redemptive Performance (Cambridge, 2020)Google Scholar
Craik, Katharine, ed., Shakespeare and Emotion (Cambridge, 2020)Google Scholar
Edmondson, Paul, and Wells, Stanley, eds., All the Sonnets of Shakespeare (Cambridge, 2020)Google Scholar
Gilchrist, Kim, Staging Britain’s Past: Pre-Roman Britain in Early Modern Drama (London and New York, 2021)Google Scholar
Ivic, Christopher, The Subject of Britain, 1603–25 (Manchester, 2020)CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Knecht, Ross, The Grammar Rules of Affection: Passion and Pedagogy in Sidney, Shakespeare and Jonson (Toronto, Buffalo, London, 2021)CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McInnis, David, Shakespeare and Lost Plays (Cambridge, 2021)Google Scholar
Razzall, Lucy, Boxes and Books in Early Modern England: Materiality, Metaphor, Containment (Cambridge, 2021)Google Scholar
Thompson, Ayanna ed., The Cambridge Companion to Shakespeare and Race (Cambridge, 2021)Google Scholar

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