Eva McVitty
Doctor of Philosophy, (Arts)
Study Completed: 2016
College of Humanities & Social Sciences
Citation
Thesis Title
Treason, Manhood, and the English State. Shaping constitutional ideas and political subjects through the laws of treason, 1397-1424
Read article at Massey Research Online:
Ms McVitty鈥檚 research questioned how the relationship between the English state and its subjects was renegotiated through the laws of treason during a period when political crisis required new constitutional solutions and models of legitimation. She demonstrated that although customary and chivalric understandings of treason as a direct attack on the king remained relevant, these were being displaced by new interpretations of treason as a crime against the nation, the English people, and the public good. These had significant constitutional repercussions: they connected political subjecthood to ethnicised national identity; introduced into common law the concept of treason as a crime against the abstract public authority of the state; and expanded the scope of treason to include verbal and written expressions of political dissent. Ms McVitty also analysed late medieval conjunctions of gender and language to develop a new interpretation of significant changes in the legal treatment of treasonous speech.
Supervisors
Professor Andrew Brown
Dr Karen Jillings
Page authorised by Web Content Manager
Last updated on Monday 04 April 2022