
Figuring Racism in Medieval Christianity
by Kaplan, M. Lindsay-
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Summary
By focusing on inferiority as a category of analysis, Kaplan sharpens our understanding of contemporary racism as well as its historical development. The damaging power of racism lies in the ascription of inferiority to a set of traits and not in bodily or cultural difference alone; in the medieval context, theological authority affirms discriminatory hierarchies as a reflection of divine will.
Medieval theological discourses created a racial rationale of Jewish hereditary inferiority that also served to justify the servile status of Muslims and Africans. Kaplan's discussion of this history uncovers the ways in which racism circulated in pre-modernity and continues to do so in contemporary white supremacist discourses that similarly seek to subordinate these groups.
Author Biography
M. Lindsay Kaplan is Associate Professor of English at Georgetown University where she teaches courses on representations of race and religion in early modern drama. She authored The Culture of Slander in Early Modern England, numerous essays on The Merchant of Venice and produced an edition of the play in the Bedford/St. Martin's Texts and Contexts series.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
List of Illustrations
Introduction
Chapter One: Servitus Judaeorum: Biblical Figures, Canon Law and the
Construction of Hereditary Inferiority
Chapter Two: The Mark of Cain and Embodying Inferiority
Chapter Three: Making Darkness Visible: The Colors of Subjection in Medieval English Psalter Illuminations
Chapter Four: Jewish Ham: Developing a Discourse of Hereditary Inferiority
Chapter Five: Cain, Ham and Ishmael: The African Travels of Perpetual Servitude
Coda
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