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Staging Blackness and Performing Whiteness in Eighteenth-Century German Drama

Book

Staging Blackness and Performing Whiteness in Eighteenth-Century German Drama

DOI link for Staging Blackness and Performing Whiteness in Eighteenth-Century German Drama

Staging Blackness and Performing Whiteness in Eighteenth-Century German Drama book

Staging Blackness and Performing Whiteness in Eighteenth-Century German Drama

DOI link for Staging Blackness and Performing Whiteness in Eighteenth-Century German Drama

Staging Blackness and Performing Whiteness in Eighteenth-Century German Drama book

ByWendy Sutherland
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2016
eBook Published 20 April 2017
Pub. Location London
Imprint Routledge
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315610498
Pages 272
eBook ISBN 9781315610498
Subjects Arts, Humanities, Language & Literature, Social Sciences
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Sutherland, W. (2016). Staging Blackness and Performing Whiteness in Eighteenth-Century German Drama (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315610498

ABSTRACT

Focusing on eighteenth-century cultural productions, Wendy Sutherland examines how representations of race in philosophy, anthropology, aesthetics, drama, and court painting influenced the construction of a white bourgeois German self. Sutherland positions her work within the framework of the transatlantic slave trade, showing that slavery, colonialism, and the triangular trade between Europe, West Africa, and the Caribbean function as the global stage on which German bourgeois dramas by Friedrich Wilhelm Ziegler, Ernst Lorenz Rathlef, and Theodor Körner (and a novella by Heinrich von Kleist on which Körner's play was based) were performed against a backdrop of philosophical and anthropological influences. Plays had an important role in educating the rising bourgeois class in morality, Sutherland argues, with fathers and daughters offered as exemplary moral figures in contrast to the depraved aristocracy. At the same time, black female protagonists in nontraditional dramas represent the boundaries of physical beauty and marriage eligibility while also complicating ideas of moral beauty embodied in the concept of the beautiful soul. Her book offers convincing evidence that the eighteenth-century German stage grappled with the representation of blackness during the Age of Goethe, even though the German states were neither colonial powers nor direct participants in the slave trade.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

chapter |6 pages

Introduction Being Black in the Eighteenth-Century German Realm

chapter 1|36 pages

Staging Blackness, Constructing Whiteness: Race in Eighteenth-Century Germany

chapter 2|43 pages

Slavery, Colonialism, and the Eighteenth-Century Global Stage

chapter 3|26 pages

Stage Props and Staging Blackness: “Looking at the Overlooked” in Karl Gotthelf Lessing’s Die Mätresse (1780)

chapter 4|46 pages

The Construction of Whiteness in the Traditional German Bourgeois Drama

chapter 5|18 pages

Race, Doubles, and Foils: Staging Blackness in Friedrich Wilhelm Ziegler’s Die Mohrinn (1801) 1

chapter 6|27 pages

Race, Homosocial Desire, and the Black in Ernst Lorenz Rathlef’s Die Mohrinn zu Hamburg (1775)

chapter 7|22 pages

Reading in the Dark? 1 Racial Hierarchy and Miscegenation in Heinrich von Kleist’s Die Verlobung in St. Domingo (1811) 2 and Theodor Körner’s Toni (1812)

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