- See especially Mary Floyd-Wilson’s discussion of Best, English Ethnicity, 8 – 11 ,
which also takes account of context. Compare Neill, Putting History to the Question, 272 ,
276 ; Boose, “ ‘The Getting of a Lawful Race,’ ” 43 – 44 ; Hall, Things of Darkness, 11 – 12 , and
Karen Newman, Fashioning Femininity and English Renaissance Drama(Chicago: Univer-
sity of Chicago Press, 1991 ), 78 – 82. - On other versions of this story, see Benjamin Braude, “The Sons of Noah and the
Construction of Ethnic and Geographical Identities in the Medieval and Early Modern Pe-
riods,”William and Mary Quarterly, 3 rd ser., 54 , no. 1 (January 1997 ): 103 – 42. - See especially Boose, “ ‘The Getting of a Lawful Race,’ ” 44.
- Armitage, “The New World and British Historical Thought,” 58. I am grateful to
Benjamin Braude for his remarks on the Northwest Passage. - Greenblatt, Marvelous Possessions: The Wonder of the New World(Chicago: Univer-
sity of Chicago Press, 1991 ), who links this motif of possession to the trope of wonder.
chapter three
- On the place and parody here of due burial, see Francis Barker, “Treasures of Cul-
ture: Titus Andronicusand Death by Hanging,” in David Lee Miller et al., eds., 226 – 61 ,
esp. 231. - Loomba declares Aaron “a textbook illustration for early modern stereotypes of
blackness,” though she admits that it is hard “to agree on what these stereotypes meant to
Renaissance audiences”; Shakespeare, Race, and Colonialism,75–76. See also James L.
Calderwood, Metadrama in Shakespeare’s Henriad: Richard IItoHenry V (Berkeley: Uni-
versity of California Press, 1979 ), esp. 45. - I am referring to the well-established parallel with the dialogue in The Jew of Malta
- 177 – 215. On Marlowe’s manipulation of stereotype in these speeches, see my discussion
inSpectacles of Strangeness, 82 – 108 , esp. 100 – 103.
- 177 – 215. On Marlowe’s manipulation of stereotype in these speeches, see my discussion
- For an extensive review and augmentation of this debate, see Brian Vickers, Shake-
speare, Co-Author: A Historical Study of Five Collaborative Plays(Oxford: Oxford University
Press, 2002 ), 148 – 243. - Compare Jones, Othello’s Countrymen, who considers “the connexion between
Aaron and Muly Hamet” “conjectural” but “the direct descent from Aaron of Eleazar”
“undisputed” ( 60 ). - Ian Smith, “Those ‘slippery customers’: Rethinking Race in Titus Andronicus,”
Journal of Theatre and Drama 3 ( 1997 ): 56. For alternative readings of the initial trauma,
see Deborah Willis, “ ‘The gnawing vulture’: Revenge, Trauma Theory, and Titus Andron-
icus,”Shakespeare Quarterly 53 , no. 1 (Spring 2002 ): 21 – 52 ; and Naomi Conn Liebler, “Get-
ting It All Right: Titus Andronicusand Roman History,” Shakespeare Quarterly 45 , no. 3
(Fall 1994 ): 263 – 78. - Barker, 254. Compare Francesca T. Royster, “White-limed Walls: Whiteness and
Gothic Extremism in Shakespeare’s Titus Andronicus,”Shakespeare Quarterly 51 , no. 4
(Winter 2000 ): 432 – 55 , who sees Tamora as the more disturbing alien presence within
notes to pages 61–67 209