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Teacher Trouble: Performing Race in the Majority-White Shakespeare Classroom
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 09 December 2019
Abstract
The topic of race has long enriched Shakespeare scholarship. Race scholarship remains marginalized in the broader world of Shakespeare studies. The simultaneous “truth” of these statements reveals a deeply rooted professional ambivalence. And while recent attention has been paid to its manifestation at conferences and in journals, this essay explores its challenge to black teacher–scholars in the majority-white classroom. Rethinking The Merchant of Venice as an educational play, with Portia and Shylock performing as nontraditional teachers, I develop the concept of “teacher trouble” from Judith Butler's “gender trouble” to reflect personally on the perils and liberatory potential of antiracist performative strategies.
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References
1 Shakespeare, William, The Merchant of Venice, in The Norton Shakespeare, ed. Greenblatt, Stephen, Cohen, Walter, Howard, Jean E., and Maus, Katharine Eisaman (New York: W. W. Norton & Company Inc., 1997), 4.1.151Google Scholar. All Shakespeare quotations are from this edition.
2 Ibid., 4.1.143.
3 Ibid., 4.1.104.
4 Shakespeare, The Taming of the Shrew, 1.1. 2.
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20 Herman, Edward and Brodhead, Frank, Demonstration Elections (Boston: South End Press, 1984)Google Scholar, quoted in Chomsky, Noam, “The Responsibility of the Intellectuals,” in The Chomsky Reader, ed. Peck, James (New York: Pantheon Books, 1987), 57–136, 129Google Scholar.
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27 Ibid., 3.1.49–50.
28 Ibid., 4.1.88.
29 Ibid., 4.1.91.
30 Ibid., 1.3.41.
31 Ibid., 1.3.42.
32 Ibid., 1.3.139.
33 Ibid., 2.5.12.
34 Ibid., 2.5.36.
35 Ibid., 2.5.36–37.
36 Goddard, Harold C., The Meaning of Shakespeare, Volume I (Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1951), 94Google Scholar, original emphasis.
37 Ibid., 94.
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