Keywords of Identity is a state-of-the-art work of interdisciplinary scholarship that analyses terms and debates that were central to the conceptualization of identity, race, migration, and transculturality in early modern England. Raymond Williams's 1976 classic Keywords: A Vocabulary of Culture and Society, Keywords of Identity offers thirty-six essays on terms ranging from "citizen," "stranger," and "alien," to "Jew," "Mahometan," "vagrant," and "spy." Contributors offer a set of short, cogent explorations of essential terms, concepts and motifs; they draw on the entire range of the early modern socio-political and cultural context, rather than historical linguistics alone. The aim is not to settle on a single definitive description, but to illuminate precisely the complexity-and often, the multiplicity-inherent in the usage of these terms in early modern English.Together, the essays in this volume provide an invaluable resource for anyone interested in issues of identity, belonging, and human mobility.