Book contents
- England’s Insular Imagining
- England’s Insular Imagining
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Plates
- Abbreviations
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 Writing the Forgotten War I: Henry’s War, 1542–1547
- Chapter 2 Writing the Forgotten War II: Somerset’s War, 1547–1550
- Chapter 3 How England Became an Island: The Faerie Queene
- Chapter 4 Scotland sui juris? Scottish Literature and the Marian Constitutional Crisis, 1567–1573
- Chapter 5 On the Knees of the Body Politic: Scottish Succession and English Liberties, 1567–1608
- Chapter 6 Scotland Un-kingdomed: English History on Stage
- Chapter 7 Race-Making in the Invention of Britain: The Masque of Blackness
- Chapter 8 Divisions and Kingdoms: Oedipal Britain from Gorboduc to King Lear
- Coda: Macbeth. ‘Alas, poor country’
- Works Cited
- Index
- Plate Section (PDF Only)
Chapter 7 - Race-Making in the Invention of Britain: The Masque of Blackness
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 September 2023
- England’s Insular Imagining
- England’s Insular Imagining
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Plates
- Abbreviations
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 Writing the Forgotten War I: Henry’s War, 1542–1547
- Chapter 2 Writing the Forgotten War II: Somerset’s War, 1547–1550
- Chapter 3 How England Became an Island: The Faerie Queene
- Chapter 4 Scotland sui juris? Scottish Literature and the Marian Constitutional Crisis, 1567–1573
- Chapter 5 On the Knees of the Body Politic: Scottish Succession and English Liberties, 1567–1608
- Chapter 6 Scotland Un-kingdomed: English History on Stage
- Chapter 7 Race-Making in the Invention of Britain: The Masque of Blackness
- Chapter 8 Divisions and Kingdoms: Oedipal Britain from Gorboduc to King Lear
- Coda: Macbeth. ‘Alas, poor country’
- Works Cited
- Index
- Plate Section (PDF Only)
Summary
Historians and critics assume that the topic of ‘Britain’ and Camden’s Britannia only became political in 1603. But Camden’s Britannia (1586) was political in its very conception. Camden deliberately set out to undermine George Buchanan’s innovative 1582 account of Britain’s three ancient, Gaulish-speaking indigenous races (Britons, Picts and Scots). Camden wants only one indigenous race: Britons. So he conflates Picts and Britons as ‘painted people’, excluding Scots. Ben Jonson, Camden’s pupil, transformed this identification of British indigeneity with painted skin in the The Masque of Blackness, where Britannia becomes an island ‘discovered’ by the daughters of Niger as they seek to become ‘fair’. Inverting the poetry of Claudian, for whom sunburnt Africans and painted Britons mark the extremes of a vast Roman empire, Jonson sets Britannia at the centre of a new sea-empire, integrating the races of Britain by producing them as unpainted and therefore ‘white’. As unpainted indigenous whiteness replaces Camden’s painted indigeneity, what is left is ‘blackness’, the unwashable hue of the peoples beyond the British seas.
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- England's Insular ImaginingThe Elizabethan Erasure of Scotland, pp. 220 - 244Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2023