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Imagining the Witch by Laura Kounine, Hardcover | Indigo Chapters

From Laura Kounine

Current price: $85.95
Imagining the Witch by Laura Kounine, Hardcover | Indigo Chapters
Imagining the Witch by Laura Kounine, Hardcover | Indigo Chapters

Coles

Imagining the Witch by Laura Kounine, Hardcover | Indigo Chapters

From Laura Kounine

Current price: $85.95
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Size: 25.4 x 234 x 612

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Imagining the Witch explores emotions, gender, and selfhood through the lens of witch-trials in early modern Germany. Witch-trials were clearly a gendered phenomenon, but witchcraft was not a uniquely female crime. While women constituted approximately three quarters of those tried forwitchcraft in the Holy Roman Empire, a significant minority were men. Witchcraft was also a crime of unbridled passion: it centred on the notion that one person's emotions could have tangible and deadly physical consequences. Yet it is also true that not all suspicions of witchcraft led to a formalaccusation, and not all witch-trials led to the stake. Indeed, just over half the total number put on trial for witchcraft in early modern Europe were executed. In order to understand how early modern people imagined the witch, we must first begin to understand how people understood themselves andeach other; this can help us to understand how the witch could be a member of the community, living alongside their accusers, yet inspire such visceral fear. Through an examination of case studies of witch-trials that took place in the early modern Lutheran duchy of Wurttemberg in southwestern Germany, Laura Kounine examines how the community, church, and the agents of the law sought to identify the witch, and the ways in which ordinary men and womenfought for their lives in an attempt to avoid the stake. The study further explores the visual and intellectual imagination of witchcraft in this period in order to piece together why witchcraft could be aligned with such strong female stereotypes on the one hand, but also be imagined as a crimethat could be committed by any human, whether young or old, male or female. By moving beyond stereotypes of the witch, Imagining the Witch argues that understandings of what constituted witchcraft and the "witch" appear far more contested and unstable than has previously been suggested. It alsosuggests new ways of thinking about early modern selfhood which moves beyond teleological arguments about the development of the "modern" self. Indeed, it is the trial process itself that created the conditions for a diverse range of people to reflect on, and give meaning, to emotions, gender, andthe self in early modern Lutheran Germany. | Imagining the Witch by Laura Kounine, Hardcover | Indigo Chapters

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