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The Visions Of Isobel Gowdie Magic Witchcraft And Dark Shamanism In Seventeenthcentury Scotland Emma Wilby

  • SKU: BELL-37049372
The Visions Of Isobel Gowdie Magic Witchcraft And Dark Shamanism In Seventeenthcentury Scotland Emma Wilby
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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The Visions Of Isobel Gowdie Magic Witchcraft And Dark Shamanism In Seventeenthcentury Scotland Emma Wilby instant download after payment.

Publisher: Sussex Academic Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 27.39 MB
Pages: 620
Author: Emma Wilby
ISBN: 9781845191801, 1845191803
Language: English
Year: 2010

Product desciption

The Visions Of Isobel Gowdie Magic Witchcraft And Dark Shamanism In Seventeenthcentury Scotland Emma Wilby by Emma Wilby 9781845191801, 1845191803 instant download after payment.

The witchcraft confessions given by Isobel Gowdie (in Auldearn, Scotland in 1662)are widely celebrated as the most extraordinary on record in Britain. Their descriptive power, vivid imagery, and contentious subject matter have attracted considerable interest on both academic and popular levels. This book,written by Emma Wilby, author of the critically acclaimed Cunning Folk and Familiar Spirits, provides the first full-length examination of the confessions and the life and character of the woman behind them. The author's discovery of the original trial records, deemed lost for nearly 200 years, provides a starting point for an interdisciplinary endeavor to separate Isobel's voice from that of her interrogators, to identify the beliefs and experiences that informed her testimony, and to analyze why her confessions differ so markedly from those of other witchcraft suspects from the period. In the course of these enquiries, the author develops wider hypotheses relevant to the study of early modern witchcraft as a whole, bringing together for the first time recent research into Amazonian 'dark' shamanism, false-memory generation, and mutual-dream experience, along with literature on marriage-covenant mysticism and protection-charm traditions. Emma Wilby concludes that close analysis of Isobel's confessions supports the still-controversial hypothesis that in 17th-Century Scotland, as in other parts of Europe in this period, popular spirituality was shaped through a deep interaction between church teachings and shamanistic traditions of pre-Christian origin. She also extends this thesis beyond its normal association with beneficent magic and overtly folkloric themes to speculate that some of Europe's more malevolent and demonological witch-narratives may also have emerged out of visionary rites underpinned by cogent shamanistic rationales.

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