Front cover image for Treason by words : literature, law, and rebellion in Shakespeare's England

Treason by words : literature, law, and rebellion in Shakespeare's England

"Under the Tudor monarchy, English law expanded to include the category of "treason by words." Rebecca Lemon investigates this remarkable phrase both as a legal charge and as a cultural event. English citizens, she shows, expressed competing notions of treason in opposition to the growing absolutism of the monarchy. Lemon explores the complex participation of texts by John Donne, Ben Jonson, and William Shakespeare in the legal and political controversies marking the Earl of Essex's 1601 rebellion and the 1605 Gunpowder Plot." "Lemon suggests that the articulation of diverse ideas about treason within literary and polemical texts produced increasingly fractured conceptions of the crime of treason itself."--Jacket
Print Book, English, 2006
Cornell University Press, Ithaca, N.Y., 2006
Criticism, interpretation, etc
ix, 234 pages ; 24 cm
9780801444289, 9780801474491, 0801444284, 0801474493
62290510
Sovereignty, treason law, and the political imagination in early modern England
The treason of Hayward's Henry IV
Shakespeare's anatomy of resistance in Richard II
Scaffolds of treason in Shakespeare's Macbeth
Donne's Pseudo-martyr and post Gunpowder Plot law
Treason and emergency power in Jonson's Catiline