TY - JOUR
T1 - Shakespeare Through Decolonization
AU - Karim-Cooper, Farah
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 The Author(s). Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the English Association. All rights reserved.
PY - 2021
Y1 - 2021
N2 - In this article, I ask what Shakespeare's position is in the ongoing debate about how we present our cultural past today. This debate includes not just efforts to decolonize curricula in universities, but broader polemics within the culture/heritage sector and higher education, notably a right-wing backlash against scholarly efforts, in universities and elsewhere, to re-evaluate, and recontextualize Britain's past. I note that the construction of Shakespeare as the 'Bard' was itself instrumentalized within the British colonial project, as a national poet and as an icon of white heritage and excellence: the conception of the man as Bard is, I argue, endemic to coloniality. Contemporary theatre historiography has markedly de-centralized Shakespeare, and I suggest that we need to introduce further consideration of race, identity and early modern constructions of 'otherness' into its wide-ranging theatrical reconstruction of the past. I finish with a few strategies as a way of decolonizing Shakespeare and/or early modern literature.
AB - In this article, I ask what Shakespeare's position is in the ongoing debate about how we present our cultural past today. This debate includes not just efforts to decolonize curricula in universities, but broader polemics within the culture/heritage sector and higher education, notably a right-wing backlash against scholarly efforts, in universities and elsewhere, to re-evaluate, and recontextualize Britain's past. I note that the construction of Shakespeare as the 'Bard' was itself instrumentalized within the British colonial project, as a national poet and as an icon of white heritage and excellence: the conception of the man as Bard is, I argue, endemic to coloniality. Contemporary theatre historiography has markedly de-centralized Shakespeare, and I suggest that we need to introduce further consideration of race, identity and early modern constructions of 'otherness' into its wide-ranging theatrical reconstruction of the past. I finish with a few strategies as a way of decolonizing Shakespeare and/or early modern literature.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85128115316&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1093/english/efab033
DO - 10.1093/english/efab033
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85128115316
SN - 0013-8215
VL - 70
SP - 319
EP - 324
JO - ENGLISH
JF - ENGLISH
IS - 271
ER -