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Treason and Masculinity in Medieval England
0 - Default Title
Description
This pioneering study presents a new interpretation of treason, not only as a legal construct, a political weapon and a tool for constitutional thinking, but also as a cultural category, aligning it with questions of gender, vernacularity and national identity. It examines cases from the 1380s to the 1420s, revealing how kings defended their claims to sovereign authority by using the laws of treason to bind their mortal male bodies to the enduring body politic of the realm, and explains how that body politic was masculinised through its entanglement in contests over manly honour and homosocial loyalties. Drawing on evidence from trial records, legislation and chronicles, it illuminates the ways in which cultural ideals of manhood reinforced or subverted government responses to crises of legitimacy, and demonstrates that gender conditioned understandings of treason in the political arena as well as the definitions embedded in statutes and case law. At the same time, it explores the varied ways men defended themselves from accusations of treason by invoking, and in the process helping to transform, shared beliefs about what it meant to be a man in medieval England.
E. AMANDA MCVITTY is a Lecturer in History in the School of Humanities, Massey University, Aotearoa New Zealand.
Product details
Number of Pages:
260
Release Date:
2020-09-18
Publication Date:
2020-09-01
Publisher:
Boydell Press
Languages:
Original:
English
ISBN10:
1783275553
ISBN13:
9781783275557
GPSR Manufacturer Reference:
Weight:
558 g
Height:
161 cm
Width:
240 cm
Thickness:
19 cm
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