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Things of Darkness: Economies of Race and Gender in Early Modern England.


Kim F. Hall. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1995.319 pp. $42.50 (cl), ISBN ISBN
abbr.
International Standard Book Number


ISBN International Standard Book Number

ISBN n abbr (= International Standard Book Number) → ISBN m 
: 0-8014-3117-4; $17.95 (pap), ISBN: 0-8014-8249-6.

In this fascinating study of the tropology tro·pol·o·gy  
n. pl. tro·pol·o·gies
1. The use of tropes in speech or writing.

2. A mode of biblical interpretation insisting on the morally edifying sense of tropes in the Scriptures.
 of race and gender in early modern England, Kim Hall demystifies the aestheticizing - and the "critical effacement effacement /ef·face·ment/ (e-fas´ment) the obliteration of features; said of the cervix during labor when it is so changed that only the external os remains. " (1) - of race that has marked traditional commentary. (A well-known example that she cites is Lysander's rejection in A Midsummer Night's Dream A Midsummer Night's Dream is a romantic comedy by William Shakespeare written sometime in the 1590s. It portrays the adventures of four young Athenian lovers and a group of amateur actors, their interactions with the Duke and Duchess of Athens, Theseus and Hippolyta, and  of Hermia as "Ethiop" and "tawny Tartar.") This perspective yields startling star·tle  
v. star·tled, star·tling, star·tles

v.tr.
1. To cause to make a quick involuntary movement or start.

2. To alarm, frighten, or surprise suddenly. See Synonyms at frighten.
 and fruitful results: perhaps most striking is the rereading of the familiar, traditionally moralized "fair"/"dark" binary in the English Petrarchan lyric (e.g., in Sidney's Astrophel and Stella) as participating in the discourse of race.

Acknowledging that actual numbers of blacks in England during this period were not numerous, Hall argues that the "significance of blackness as a troping of race far exceeds the[ir] actual presence" (14). She thus takes the largely successful strategy of not limiting her attention to texts like Othello that are "about" blackness, but directing it to those texts which deal with race in embedded or fragmentary ways.

While firmly grounded in the work of contemporary theorists of race such as K. Anthony Appiah, Etienne Balibar, Henry Louis Gates, Jr., bell hooks, Audre Lorde, Toni Morrison, and Patricia Williams, the strength of this book lies in its unwavering focus on the historical specificity of "race" in the early modern period. Thus it is entirely fitting that the study begins with the analysis of Renaissance travel narratives - by Leo Africanus, Richard Hakluyt and Samuel Purchase - that served as the originary textual site of colonialism where the European discourse on race (and its close interrelation with gender) was first worked out.

Another strength of this work is its density - the range and the kind of materials treated. In addition to the texts already mentioned and drama including Jonson's Masque masque, courtly form of dramatic spectacle, popular in England in the first half of the 17th cent. The masque developed from the early 16th-century disguising, or mummery, in which disguised guests bearing presents would break into a festival and then join with their  of Blackness, Shakespeare's The Tempest, Webster's The Devil's Law-Case, and Richard Brome's less familiar The English Moore, the book examines the response of women writers (primarily Mary Wroth's in her romance Urania Urania (yrā`nēə): see Aphrodite; Muses.

Urania

muse of astrology. [Gk. Myth.
) to the male discourse of colonialism and adventurism ad·ven·tur·ism  
n.
Involvement in risky enterprises without regard to proper procedures and possible consequences, especially the reckless intervention by a nation in the affairs of another nation or region:
, as well as the representation of African slaves and servants in visual culture such as artifacts artifacts

see specimen artifacts.
 and portraits. Particularly of interest is the analysis of portraiture, where adoring black attendants were deployed to represent the power and prerogative of the white male colonist, or the beauty of the white female aristocrat. In the latter instance, however, the woman and the attendant are subtly linked and hence identified as objects.

The appendix containing "Poems of Blackness," some of which are only available in their original, seventeenth-century editions, will prove a useful pedagogical resource for those wishing to supplement "race-blind" anthologies of the English Renaissance lyric. Hall's activist concern with pedagogy is also evident in her impassioned reflection, in the epilogue, on her position as a black feminist writing and teaching in a largely white academy; not content to leave her study in the purely historical and academic registers, she situates it in the contemporary politics of race and gender.

In placing race within the discursive network not only of gender, but of class, nationalism, and colonialism/imperialism, this book, together with Margo Hendricks and Patricia Parker's collection, Women, "Race" and Writing, marks the beginning of a sustained, historically and theoretically aware interrogation of the significance of race in the early modern period.

MIHOKO SUZUKI University of Miami This article is about the university in Coral Gables, Florida. For the university in Oxford, Ohio, see Miami University.

The University of Miami (also known as Miami of Florida,[2] UM,[3] or just The U
 
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Author:Suzuki, Mihoko
Publication:Renaissance Quarterly
Article Type:Book Review
Date:Jun 22, 1998
Words:566
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