Speaking of the Moor: From Alcazar to OthelloUniversity of Pennsylvania Press, 2008 - 252 Seiten Selected by Choice magazine as an Outstanding Academic Title "Speak of me as I am," Othello, the Moor of Venice, bids in the play that bears his name. Yet many have found it impossible to speak of his ethnicity with any certainty. What did it mean to be a Moor in the early modern period? In the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries, when England was expanding its reach across the globe, the Moor became a central character on the English stage. In The Battle of Alcazar, Titus Andronicus, Lust's Dominion, and Othello, the figure of the Moor took definition from multiple geographies, histories, religions, and skin colors. Rather than casting these variables as obstacles to our--and England's--understanding of the Moor's racial and cultural identity, Emily C. Bartels argues that they are what make the Moor so interesting and important in the face of growing globalization, both in the early modern period and in our own. In Speaking of the Moor, Bartels sets the early modern Moor plays beside contemporaneous texts that embed Moorish figures within England's historical record--Richard Hakluyt's Principal Navigations, Queen Elizabeth's letters proposing the deportation of England's "blackamoors," and John Pory's translation of The History and Description of Africa. Her book uncovers the surprising complexity of England's negotiation and accommodation of difference at the end of the Elizabethan era. |
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... fact , essen- tial to its core , not because , as a signifier , " Moor " is unstable and unreadable but because , as a subject , " the Moor " does not have a single or pure , cultur- ally or racially bounded identity . Within early ...
... fact , the com- plexity and variability of these cultural and racial inscriptions that make turn- ing or returning to the Moor , and understanding England's short but serious preoccupation with that subject in all its particulars , so ...
... fact , gone on to become the chair- man of the Sierra Leonean Writers Series , a project established in 2001 with the specific mission of drawing attention to the writers of and writings on Sierra Leone and introducing these into West ...
From Alcazar to Othello Emily Carroll Bartels. tion , glossing over the fact that not all Moors were Africans and not all Africans , Moors . The association of Moors with Africa remained a critical starting point in the decades after ...
Inhalt
Enter Barbary The Battle of Alcazar and the World | 21 |
Imperialist Beginnings Hakluyts Navigations and the Place and Displacement of Africa | 45 |
Incorporate in Rome Titus Andronicus and the Consequence of Conquest | 65 |
Too Many Blackamoors Deportation Discrimination and Elizabeth I | 100 |
Banishing all the Moors Lusts Dominion and the Story of Spain | 118 |
Cultural Traffic The History and Description of Africa and the Unmooring of the Moor | 138 |
The stranger of here and everywhere Othello and the Moor of Venice | 155 |
A Brave New World | 191 |
NOTES | 195 |
227 | |
243 | |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS | 251 |