'This is the book that will inspire the next generation of Shakespeare scholars. Pointed in its purpose, intersectional in its approach, and masterfully assembled, this collection's deep commitment to interrogating race making in and through Shakespeare cuts across every single chapter. With contributions from some of the most exciting scholars of early modern race studies today, this book engages a broad range of Shakespeare's works through historical, textual, performance, and contemporary contexts, and reorients readers to recognize the central role that constructions of race and racism play in both the way we apprehend Shakespeare and the way his works apprehend the world, then and now.' Ruben Espinosa, University of Texas at El Paso