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Ian Smith, "Black Shakespeare: Reading and Misreading Race" (Cambridge UP, 2022)

Feb 7, 2026
Ian Smith, Professor of English at USC and author of Black Shakespeare, argues for racial literacy in reading Shakespeare. He explores how systemic whiteness shapes readers, reframes Shylock and Hamlet through race, and situates Othello as a test of modern racial understanding. He also connects early modern plays to U.S. histories and previews work on early modern blackface.
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INSIGHT

Systemic Whiteness Shapes Readers' Epistemology

  • Systemic whiteness is the institutional conditioning that produces a widespread white preference in readers and society.
  • Ian Smith links this to laws and institutions that shape epistemologies and racial blind spots in Shakespeare studies.
ANECDOTE

Panel Claim: 'Othello Is Not About Race'

  • Smith recalls a panelist declaring 'Othello is not a play about race' as an example of denial in the field.
  • He uses such moments to probe why critics often resist racial readings rather than dismissing them as bad faith.
INSIGHT

Readers Exist Along A Racial-Literacy Trajectory

  • Readers occupy a range on a trajectory of racial literacy rather than a binary white/Non-white divide.
  • Smith argues systemic whiteness affects everyone but degrees differ by experience and formation.
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