List of Illustrations
Notes on Contributors
Series Preface
Introduction:
Recent Trends in Merchant of Venice Criticism, M. Lindsay Kaplan (Georgetown University, US)
Chapter One: ‘Lend it rather to thine enemy’: Accentuating Difference in The Merchant of Venice, Miriam Gilbert(University of Iowa, US)
Chapter Two: Dangerous Border Crossings: Nicolas Stemann's Merchant in Munich,
Benjamin Fowler (University of Sussex, UK)
Chapter Three: Thomas Jordan's 'The Forfeiture', A Mercantilist Rewriting of Shakespeare, Katherine Romack (University of West Florida, US)
Chapter Four: Jessica, Women’s Activism, and Maurice Schwartz’s 1947 Shayloks Tochter,
Sara Coodin (University of Oklahoma, US)
Chapter Five:'Wooly Breeders': Animal Generation and Economies of Knowledge in The Merchant of Venice, James Kearney (University of California, Santa Barbara, US)
Chapter Six:'The means whereby I live’: Deep Play in The Merchant of Venice Jeanette Nguyen Tran, (Drake University, US)
Chapter Seven:‘Qualities of Breeding’: Race, Class, and Conduct in The Merchant of Venice,
Patricia Akhimie (Rutgers University – Newark, US)
Chapter Eight:Jessica, Sarra and Ruth: Three Jewish Women Confronting Shylock, Shaul Bassi, (Ca’ Foscari University of Venice, Italy)
Chapter Nine:‘Tainted wether of the flock’: Repurposing Fiorentino’s Doting Godfather in Shakespeare’s Merchant of Venice,” Thomas Cartelli, Professor of English & Film Studies (Muhlenberg College, US)
Chapter Ten:'Epistemology of the Early Modern Closet, or, TheMerchant of Venice Unlockt,'
A. Eliza Greenstadt, (Portland State University, US)
Notes
References
Index