Early modern scholarship often reads the dramatic representations of the Muslim woman in the light of postcolonial identity politics, which sees an organic relationship between the West's historical domination of the East and the Western discourse on the East. This book problematizes the above trajectory by arguing that the assumption of a power relation between a dominating West and a subordinate East cannot be sustained within the context of the political and historical realities of early modern Europe. The Ottoman Empire remained as a dominant superpower throughout the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries and was perceived by Protestant England both as a military and religious threat and as a possible ally against Catholic Spain. Reading a series of early modern plays from Marlowe to Beaumont and Fletcher alongside a number of historical sources and documents, this book re-interprets the image of Islamic femininity in the period's drama to reflect this overturn in the world's power balances, as well as the intricate dynamics of England's intensified contact with Islam in the Mediterranean.
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Images of the Muslim Woman in Early Modern English Drama: Queens, Eves, and Furies
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Images of the Muslim Woman in Early Modern English Drama: Queens, Eves, and Furies
This well-historicized literary analysis makes an outstanding pinpointed intervention in the surging scholarly conversation about the workings of racism, coloniality, and gender in early modern English drama’s representations of Muslim Others.
Published date: Jan 29, 2021
Language: English
No. of Pages: 192
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
ISBN: 9781793625229
Dimensions:
6.35" W x
0.8" L x
8.99" H
Öz Öktem is assistant professor in the English Language and Literature Department of Istanbul Aydin University.
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