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The Bard in the Borderlands: An Anthology of Shakespeare Appropriations en La Frontera, Volume 1 book cover

The Bard in the Borderlands: An Anthology of Shakespeare Appropriations en La Frontera, Volume 1

CC BY-NC-ND (Attribution NonCommercial NoDerivatives)   English

Author(s): Katherine Gillen, Adrianna M. Santos, and Kathryn Vomero Santos, eds.

Publisher: ACMRS Press

Last updated: 29/03/2024

For several decades, Chicanx and Indigenous theatermakers have been repurposing Shakespeare’s plays to reflect the histories and lived realities of the US–Mexico Borderlands and to create space to tell stories of and for La Frontera. Celebrating this rich tradition, The Bard in the Borderlands: An Anthology of Shakespeare Appropriations en La Frontera brings a wide range of Borderlands Shakespeare plays together for the first time in a multi-volume open-access scholarly edition.

This anthology celebrates the dynamic, multilingual reworking of canon and place that defines Borderlands Shakespeare, and it situates these geographically and temporally diverse plays within the robust study of Shakespeare’s global afterlives. The editors offer a critical framework for understanding the artistic and political traditions that shape these plays and the place of Shakespeare within the multilayered colonial histories of the region. Borderlands Shakespeare plays, they contend, do not simply reproduce Shakespeare in new contexts but rather use his work in innovative ways to negotiate colonial power and to envision socially just futures.

Gender in the Premodern Mediterranean book cover

Gender in the Premodern Mediterranean

CC BY-NC-ND (Attribution NonCommercial NoDerivatives)   English

Author(s): Edited by Megan Moore

Editor(s): Megan Moore

Publisher: ACMRS Press

Last updated: 21/11/2023

Drawing upon literary, historical, and visual evidence, this collection of interdisciplinary essays examines how the Mediterranean shaped practices of gender in the premodern era. This volume bridges the gap between gender studies and Mediterranean studies, which have a natural fit with each other in their interest on defining identity carefully through connectivity and attentiveness to cultural hegemonies. The essays in this volume build off of this double approach to offer a unique contribution to the field, and use gender to understand the Mediterranean and the Mediterranean to understand premodern gender.

Whereas other volumes have examined gender in the premodern period or premodern Mediterranean Studies, to date no other volume has sought to explore the intersection of the two. The interdisciplinary nature of the essays will make them useful to both scholars and teachers, for they will combine theory and practice in a length that makes them easily accessible to advanced students as well as specialized researchers. The first chapter provides a critical overview of the scholarship on Mediterranean studies as a field of area studies as well as an overview of gender studies in the medieval period. As such, the volume will be useful for students, teachers, and researchers, and its interdisciplinary nature reflects the diaspora of the Mediterranean itself.

Seeing Race Before Race book cover

Seeing Race Before Race

CC BY-NC-ND (Attribution NonCommercial NoDerivatives)   English

Author(s): Noémie Ndiaye and Lia Markey, eds.

Subject(s): History of art, Critical theory

Institution(s): Arizona State University

Publisher: ACMRS Press

Last updated: 08/11/2023

The capacious visual archive studied in this volume includes a trove of materials such as annotated or illuminated manuscripts, Renaissance costume books and travel books, maps and cartographic volumes produced by Europeans as well as Indigenous peoples, mass-printed pamphlets, jewelry, decorative arts, religious iconography, paintings from around the world, ceremonial objects, festival books, and play texts intended for live performance.

Contributors explore the deployment of what coeditor Noémie Ndiaye calls “the racial matrix” and its interconnected paradigms across the medieval and early modern chronological divide and across vast transnational and multilingual geographies. This volume uses items from the Fall 2023 exhibition “Seeing Race Before Race”— a collaboration between RaceB4Race® and the Newberry Library — as a starting point for an ambitious theoretical conversation between premodern race studies, art history, performance studies, book history, and critical race theory.

Rivall Friendship by Bridget Manningham book cover

Rivall Friendship by Bridget Manningham

CC BY-NC-ND (Attribution NonCommercial NoDerivatives)   English

Author(s): Edited by Jean R. Brink

Editor(s): Jean R. Brink, Mary Ellen Lamb, William F. Gentrup

Institution(s): Arizona State University

Publisher: ACMRS Press

Last updated: 27/10/2023

The manuscript for Rivall Friendship was first acquired by the Newberry Library in 1937. At the time of the acquisition, the author of this seventeenth-century romance was anonymous. Scholar Jean R. Brink now suggests, based on dating of the manuscript and her analysis of its feminist themes, that the author was a woman. Specifically, Brink attributes the text to Bridget Manningham, who was the older sister of Thomas Manningham, a Jacobean and Caroline bishop, and the granddaughter of John Manningham, a diarist who recorded performances of Shakespeare’s plays.

Rivall Friendship is a post–English Civil War romance that examines proto-feminist issues, such as patriarchal dominance in the family and marriage. Manningham is scrupulous about maintaining verisimilitude, and unlike more fantastical romances of the period that feature monsters, giants, and magic, this text aspires to a level of probability in its historical and geographical details. The text of Rivall Friendship is accessible to most modern readers, particularly to students and scholars accustomed to working with seventeenth-century texts.

Teaching Race in the European Renaissance: A Classroom Guide book cover

Teaching Race in the European Renaissance: A Classroom Guide

CC BY-NC-ND (Attribution NonCommercial NoDerivatives)   English

Author(s): Matthieu Chapman and Anna Wainwright, eds.

Institution(s): Arizona State University

Publisher: ACMRS Press

Last updated: 16/10/2023

Race and Affect in Early Modern English Literature book cover

Race and Affect in Early Modern English Literature

CC BY-NC (Attribution NonCommercial)   English

Author(s): Carol Mejia LaPerle

Editor(s): Carol Mejia LaPerle

Subject(s): Literature: history and criticism, Cultural studies

Institution(s): Arizona State University

Publisher: ACMRS Press

Last updated: 16/10/2023

Race and Affect in Early Modern English Literature puts the fields of critical race studies and affect theory into dialogue. Doing so opens a new set of questions: What are the emotional experiences of racial formation and racist ideologies? How do feelings—through the physical senses, emotional passions, or sexual encounters—come to signify race? What is the affective register of anti-blackness that pervades canonical literature? How can these visceral forms of racism be resisted in discourse and in practice? By investigating how race feels, this book offers new ways of reading and interpreting literary traditions, religious differences, gendered experiences, class hierarchies, sexuality, and social identities. So far scholars have shaped the discussion of race in the early modern period by focusing on topics such as genealogy, language, economics, religion, skin color, and ethnicity. This book, however, offers something new: it considers racializing processes as visceral, affective experiences.

Race and Romance: Coloring the Past book cover

Race and Romance: Coloring the Past

CC BY-NC-ND (Attribution NonCommercial NoDerivatives)   English

Author(s): Margo Hendricks

Subject(s): Literature: history and criticism, Cultural studies, Gender studies, gender groups

Institution(s): Arizona State University

Publisher: ACMRS Press

Last updated: 16/10/2023

Race and Romance: Coloring the Past explores the literary and cultural genealogy of colorism, white passing, and white presenting in the romance genre. The scope of the study ranges from Heliodorus’ Aithiopika to the short novels of Aphra Behn, to the modern romance novel Forbidden by Beverly Jenkins. This analysis engages with the troublesome racecraft of “passing” and the instability of racial identity and its formation from the premodern to the present. The study also looks at the significance of white settler colonialism to early modern romance narratives. A bridge between studies of early modern romance and scholarship on twenty-first-century romance novels, this book is well-suited for those interested in the romance genre.