- There may also be play with the erotic implications of “country” matters here.
- On the importance of “purity of blood” to Spanish cultural identity in the early
 modern period, see Verena Stolcke, “Invaded Women: Gender, Race, and Class in the For-
 mation of Colonial Society,” in Hendricks and Parker, eds., 272 – 86.
- Compare Barthelemy, Black Face, 104 , who also attaches Eleazar’s “position of le-
 gitimacy” to his villainy; and Jones, Othello’s Countrymen, 60 – 68 , who takes that legitimacy
 on in order to assess Eleazar’s character rather than to address the politics that play out
 through his characterization.
- Compare Tokson, who takes the elision of Indian and Moor as a sign of the times,
 40 – 41.
- Brereton, 154.
- See Tokson, 63 – 64.
- See also Lust’s Dominion 5. 1. 2951 – 52 , 3001 – 2 , and 3051 – 52.
- Compare Barthelemy, Black Face, who reads Eleazar’s attraction to Isabella as a
 sign of his insatiable lust.
- See my argument in Spectacles of Strangeness, 82 – 108.
- Little, 98 ; see also Iyengar, 36 – 38.
chapter six
- For an overview of the publication history, see Leo Africanus, Description of Africa,
 ed. Robert Brown, lii–lxv.
- See Oumelbanine Zhiri, “Leo Africanus’s Description of Africa,” in Travel Knowl-
 edge: European “Discoveries” in the Early Modern Period, ed. Ivo Kamps and Jyotsna G.
 Singh (New York: Palgrave, 2001 ), 258 – 66 , 259.
- Richard Hakluyt, “An approbation of the historie ensuing, by meRichard Hakluyt,”
 inThe History and Description of Africa, 103.
- Pory also includes endorsements by Ramusio, Abraham Ortelius, John Bodin, and
 others. See Pory, 103 – 6.
- Natalie Zemon Davis, Trickster Travels: A Sixteenth-Century Muslim Between Worlds
 (New York: Hill and Wang, 2006 ), 4 ; Hall, 29.
- See especially Oliver Hennessey, “Talking with the Dead: Leo Africanus, Esoteric
 Yeats, and Early Modern Imperialism,” English Literary History 71 ( 2004 ): 1019 – 38.
- From Yeats’s letters, quoted in Hennessey, 1031.
- Hennessey, 1035.
- This is the tag Burton popularizes in “ ‘A most wily bird.’ ” See also Hall, 28 – 40 ,
 who argues that The Historyexposes a colonial “nervousness about where the boundaries
 of difference lie” ( 29 ); and my essay, “Making More of the Moor.”
- Burton, “ ‘A most wily bird,’ ” 44 , 46.
- Davis, 18. I use her modernization of the Arabic name hereafter. Her opening
 chapter is entitled simply “Introduction: Crossings” ( 3 ).
- Davis, 109 , 153.
218 notes to pages 125–140
