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Race, Culture, and Openness: An Early Modern Precedent

  • William Over

Abstract:

Edward, Lord Herbert of Cherbury offers an early exploration of racial and cultural identity within the wider context of a nascent colonial expansion. He and his brother, the poet George Herbert, question dominant notions of race, culture, and color. Their poems bring color associations from abstract theological and philosophical levels to present the intimacy of human contact in intercultural and interracial contexts. The result is a view of human connectedness that affirms equality and commonality over dominant views of European superiority and priority.

 

June 2005: William Over teaches English and speech at St. John’s University, Queens, New York.  His latest book is World Peace, National Policies, and Mass Culture (Praeger, 2004).  His first book, Human Rights in the International Public Sphere, won the Best Book Award for 1999 from the National Communication Association, division of International and Intercultural Communication.  His second book, Social Justice in World Cinema and Theatre (2001) was also published by Greenwood/Ablex.

 

Publisher's Version

Last updated on 04/18/2020