Women and Race in Early Modern Texts
Cambridge University Press, 5/30/2002
EAN 9780521810166, ISBN10: 0521810167
Hardcover, 200 pages, 23.7 x 16.2 x 2 cm
Language: English
Joyce Green MacDonald discusses the links between women's racial, sexual, and civic identities in early modern texts. She examines the scarcity of African women in English plays of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, the racial identity of the women in the drama and also that of the women who watched and sometimes wrote the plays. The coverage also includes texts from the late fourteenth to the early eighteenth centuries, by, among others, Shakespeare, Jonson, Davenant, the Countess of Pembroke, and Aphra Behn. MacDonald articulates many of her discussions of early modern women's races through a comparative method, using insights drawn from critical race theory, women's history, and contemporary disputes over canonicity, multiculturalism, and Afrocentrism. Seeing women as identified by their race and social standing as well as by their sex, this book will add depth and dimension to discussions of women's writing and of gender in Renaissance literature.
Acknowledgements
Introduction
women, race, and Renaissance texts
1. Cleopatra
whiteness and knowledge
2. Sex, race, and empire in Shakespeare's Antony and Cleopatra
3. Dido and Sophonisba of Carthage
marriage, race, and the bonds between men
4. The disappearing African woman
Imoinda in Oroonoko after Behn
5. Race, women, and the sentimental in Thomas Southerne's Oroonoko
6. Chaste lines
writing and unwriting race in Katherine Phillips' Pompey
7. The Queen's minion
sexual difference, racial difference, and Aphra Behn's Abdelazer
Conclusion
'the efficacy of imagination'
Bibliography
Index.
"This elegant, innovative book fulfills and extends the promise of early modern race studies of the past decade." Renaissance Quarterly
"Her discussion of early women writers ... contributes valuably to other recent work that is providing a much-needed correction to a field that has sometimes devoted too much energy to establishing a female literary tradition and ignored the differences." Seventeenth-Century News