Imaginary Betrayals: Subjectivity and the Discourses of Treason in Early Modern EnglandIn 1352 King Edward III had expanded the legal definition of treason to include the act of imagining the death of the king, opening up the category of "constructive" treason, in which even a subject's thoughts might become the basis for prosecution. By the sixteenth century, treason was perceived as an increasingly serious threat and policed with a new urgency. Referring to the extensive early modern literature on the subject of treason, Imaginary Betrayals reveals how and to what extent ideas of proof and grounds for conviction were subject to prosecutorial construction during the Tudor period. Karen Cunningham looks at contemporary records of three prominent cases in order to demonstrate the degree to which the imagination was used to prove treason: the 1542 attainder of Katherine Howard, fifth wife of Henry VIII, charged with having had sexual relations with two men before her marriage; the 1586 case of Anthony Babington and twelve confederates, accused of plotting with the Spanish to invade England and assassinate Elizabeth; and the prosecution in the same year of Mary, Queen of Scots, indicted for conspiring with Babington to engineer her own accession to the throne. |
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The form of national identity perceived as threatened in these trials may be as explicit as that symbolized by the life of a particular queen or as implicit as that conveyed in an unspoken teleology of marriage for women.
It stated that if a woman the king should intend to marry “esteeming her pure and cleane maide” was in fact otherwise, and willingly espoused him without revealing her unchaste past, she was guilty of high treason.
55 The term “credit” was sometimes used with conscious ambiguity, as in this testimony in 1617: Susan Wylie is a woman of single ability and dwelleth upon the Common and liveth partly by her own industry and partly by the relief of her ...
... embedded in an unprece— dented legal situation in which a monarch supports his marriages by exploiting treason laws, marks an early event in the developing gender ideology that would fix women as repositories of secret sexuality.
The proceedings formulate uncertainties among epistemology, secrecy, and truth in terms of a dualism between woman's apparent and secret fidelities. As it develops narrative and rhetorical strategies for revealing the “truth” about ...
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Contenido
1 | |
Imagining the Realm | 23 |
2 Female Fidelities on Trial | 40 |
3 Masculinity Affiliation and Rootlessness | 77 |
4 Secrecy and the Epistolary Self | 110 |
Conclusion | 141 |
Notes | 145 |
Works Cited | 187 |
Index | 203 |
Acknowledgments | 215 |
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Imaginary Betrayals: Subjectivity and the Discourses of Treason in Early ... Karen Cunningham Vista previa limitada - 2002 |
Imaginary Betrayals: Subjectivity and the Discourses of Treason in Early ... Karen Cunningham Sin vista previa disponible - 2002 |