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Inkface - (Writing the Early Americas) by Miles P Grier
About this item
Highlights
- In Inkface, Miles P. Grier traces productions of Shakespeare's Othello from seventeenth-century London to the Metropolitan Opera in twenty-first-century New York.
- About the Author: Miles P. Grier is Associate Professor of English at Queens College, City University of New York.
- 346 Pages
- Literary Criticism, American
- Series Name: Writing the Early Americas
Description
About the Book
"This book traces Atlantic productions of Othello to unearth the deep roots of white racial authority and fantasies about blackness"--Book Synopsis
In Inkface, Miles P. Grier traces productions of Shakespeare's Othello from seventeenth-century London to the Metropolitan Opera in twenty-first-century New York. Grier shows how the painted stage Moor and the wife whom he theatrically stains became necessary types, reduced to objects of interpretation for a presumed white male audience. In an era of booming print production, popular urban theater, and increasing rates of literacy, the metaphor of Black skin as a readable, transferable ink became essential to a fraternity of literate white men who, by treating an elastic category of marked people as reading material, were able to assert authority over interpretation and, by extension, over the state, the family, and commerce. Inkface examines that fraternity's reading of the world as well as the ways in which those excluded attempted to counteract it.
Review Quotes
Inkface is poised to make significant contributions to the scholarly literatures on racialization in early modern British literary and performance culture and its legacies in North America. The critical, intellectual, and ideological aims of Inkface are ambitious, urgent, and generative. This book has changed so much of what I thought I knew about Othello--and all for the better!
--Douglas A. Jones, Jr., Duke UniversityMiles Grier's Inkface brilliantly traces the complex semiotic work performed by blackface in Shakespeare's Othello and its inky progeny on the page and stage across a longue durée, beginning with its inception in early seventeenth century England and then crossing the Atlantic to consider its textual and theatrical afterlives in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century America. The hermeneutics of inkface, Grier argues, far from simply grounding racialized character in an ostensibly indelible reality that renders blackness legible for white interpretive communities, loosens signifier from signified, revealing its saturation with unwieldy significations that become untethered from the "real" and thus open to resignification.
--Natasha Korda, Wesleyan University, author of Labors Lost: Women's Work and the Early Modern English StageAbout the Author
Miles P. Grier is Associate Professor of English at Queens College, City University of New York.