
New Books in History Ian Smith, "Black Shakespeare: Reading and Misreading Race" (Cambridge UP, 2022)
Feb 9, 2026
Ian Smith, Professor of English at USC and author of Black Shakespeare, probes how readers are trained to miss race in Shakespeare. He explores systemic whiteness, racial literacy, and how historical laws and theatrical strategies shape perception. Short, sharp takes touch on Othello, Shylock, Hamlet, and how classroom and archival work can reshape how we read race.
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Panel Claim: Othello 'Not About Race'
- Ian Smith recounts a panelist declaring, "Othello is not a play about race," as an example of racial denial in Shakespeare studies.
- He uses it to motivate probing why readers resist recognizing race in the plays.
Use The Classroom To Shift Perception
- Turn classrooms into sites that foreground racial literacy through deliberate pedagogical choices.
- Use consistent practices to retrain students' RAS-like filtering toward noticing race in texts.
Reading Texts Became Reading Bodies
- Colonial-era anti-literacy laws and racial classifiers worked together to deny Black people textual literacy while letting whites legally define Blackness.
- Smith emphasizes the danger when reading texts slides into legally reading bodies with life-or-death consequences.


