English Ethnicity and Race in Early Modern Drama
In English Ethnicity and Race in Early Modern Drama, first published in 2003, Mary Floyd-Wilson outlines what we might call 'scientific' conceptions of racial and ethnic differences in sixteenth- and seventeenth-century English writing. Drawing on classical and contemporary medical texts, histories and cosmographies, Floyd-Wilson demonstrates that Renaissance understandings of racial and ethnic identities contradicted many modern stereotypes concerning difference. Southerners, Africans, in particular, were identified as dispassionate, cool-tempered and wise, whereas the more northern English were understood to be unruly, impressionable and slow-witted. Concerned with the unflattering and constraining implications of this classically derived knowledge, English writers laboured to reinvent ethnology to their own advantage - a labour that paved the way for the invention of more familiar racial ideas. Floyd-Wilson highlights these English revisionary efforts in her surprising and transformational readings of the period's drama, including Marlowe's Tamburlaine, Jonson's The Masque of Blackness and Shakespeare's Othello and Cymbeline.
- Provides an entirely new way of understanding how ethnic and racial differences were conceived and perceived in the English Renaissance
- Provides a startling new reading of Shakespeare's Othello
- Argues that medical discourse, or humoralism, was primarily a mode of ethnology in early modern England
Product details
June 2006Paperback
9780521027311
272 pages
228 × 152 × 18 mm
0.409kg
10 b/w illus.
Available
Table of Contents
- List of illustrations
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: the marginal English
- Part I. Climatic Culture: The Transmissions and Transmutations of Ethnographic Knowlege:
- 1. The ghost of Hippocrates: geohumoral history in the West
- 2. British ethnology
- 3. An inside story of race: melancholy and ethnology
- Part II. The English Ethnographic Theatre:
- 4. Tamburlaine and the staging of white barbarity
- 5. Temperature and temperance in Ben Jonson's The Masque of Blackness
- 6. Othello's jealousy
- 7. Cymbeline's angels
- Notes
- Index.