Full Description
Shakespeare and Identity in a Divided World examines some of the most pressing issues about identity and so-called identity politics in the highly polarized twenty-first century. The book uses Shakespeare's plays and the history of sixteenth and seventeenth century England to discuss gender, race, mental health, disability, and fatness as they were perceived in Shakespeare's age and then considers ways in which audiences, readers, and classrooms might use them to think about those same topics in the twenty-first century.
The book includes discussion of both Shakespeare's text and contemporary productions, films, and reimaginings of those plays, as well as the historical and theoretical context relevant to each topic. Beginning with the question of Shakespeare's identity, the book then goes on to discuss femininity, masculinity, trans and queer identity, race, mental health, and then disability and fatness before concluding with a discussion of Shakespeare's condemnation of polarization, whether social or political.
Contents
Introduction: "I'll Drown My Book": Reading (and Watching) Shakespeare in the Twenty-First Century
Chapter 1: Who Was William Shakespeare?: How The Bard Came to Be (or Not to Be)
Chapter 2: Leading "Ladies": Shakespeare's Women and Problems of Gender Inequality
Chapter 3: Real Men Show Their Scars: Toxic Masculinity in Shakespeare's Violent Tragedies
Chapter 4: Cesario and Ganymede: Finding Transness in Shakespeare's "Genderbenders"
Chapter 5: Slaves and Generals: Race and Displacement in Shakespeare
Chapter 6: My Wits Begin to Turn: Causes, Cures, and Care for Mental Illness in Shakespeare's Plays
Chapter 7: Not Shaped for Sportive Tricks: Physical Disability and Fatness in Shakespeare
Epilogue: Shakespeare's Culture Wars from the Sixteenth Century to the Twenty-First