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Shakespearean Adaptation, Race and Memory in the New World

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Shakespearean Adaptation, Race and Memory in the New World Synopsis

As readers head into the second fifty years of the modern critical study of blackness and black characters in Renaissance drama, it has become a critical commonplace to note black female characters' almost complete absence from Shakespeare's plays. Despite this physical absence, however, they still play central symbolic roles in articulating definitions of love, beauty, chastity, femininity, and civic and social standing, invoked as the opposite and foil of women who are "fair". Beginning from this recognition of black women's simultaneous physical absence and imaginative presence, this book argues that modern Shakespearean adaptation is a primary means for materializing black women's often elusive presence in the plays, serving as a vital staging place for historical and political inquiry into racial formation in Shakespeare's world, and our own. Ranging geographically across North America and the Caribbean, and including film and fiction as well as drama as it discusses remade versions of Othello, Romeo and Juliet, Antony and Cleopatra, and The Taming of the Shrew, Shakespearean Adaptation, Race, and Memory in the New World will attract scholars of early modern race studies, gender and performance, and women in Renaissance drama. 

About This Edition

ISBN: 9783030506827
Publication date:
Author: Joyce Green MacDonald
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan an imprint of Springer International Publishing
Format: Paperback
Pagination: 179 pages
Series: Palgrave Shakespeare Studies
Genres: Literary studies: general
Comparative literature
Theatre studies
History of Performing Arts
Plays, playscripts
Performing arts