Witchcraft in the Western Tradition
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Narrated by:
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Jennifer McNabb
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Written by:
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Jennifer McNabb
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The Great Courses
About this listen
From Shakespeare’s trio in Macbeth to modern-day Halloween costumes, witches have occupied our imaginations for centuries. Much of what we associate with witchcraft has been the result of myth-making and stereotypes, but where do these stories come from? And why do they continue to inform the concept of “witch” in the popular imagination?
Beginning with the witch hunts of the early 15th century, Professor Jennifer McNabb takes you on an eye-opening exploration of witchcraft and superstition in Witchcraft in the Western Tradition. In these 10 lectures, you will better understand where many of our most indelible images of witchcraft come from and how the religious pursuit of witches across Europe and into the Americas in the early modern period spread fear and violence like a contagion, for generations.
As you examine the impact of witchcraft hysteria, you will also come to better understand the cultural, religious, economic, social, and other factors that contributed to the witch hunts that caught hundreds of thousands of people in their wake. How did social unrest and competition for resources fuel persecution? Why were women targeted so much more than men? How much of the hysteria surrounding witchcraft was real fear, and how much of it was manufactured by those acting in their own self-interest? As you search for the answers to these questions and more, you will meet perpetrators and victims, true believers and opportunists, the accusers and the accused. And, while these events can feel rooted in the distant past, you will also see how superstition and fear can continue to operate in our modern world, from Nazi witch hunts in the 1930s to the “satanic panic” of the 1980s - and even in our own contemporary response to crisis events.
©2020 Audible Originals, LLC (P)2020 Audible Originals, LLC.What listeners say about Witchcraft in the Western Tradition
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- Bella Bekah
- 2024-02-29
Expanded my knowledge
Detailed and well written and performed. I enjoy these lectures, it expanded my knowledge of the time and the false history info was most fascinating.
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- Silver Longjohns
- 2022-08-08
Very misleading title, but...
This course is not an anthropological exploration of witchcraft or its practises, but a historical exploration of witch-hunting, which is vastly different from what I thought it would be about.
That said, it was well-presented, interesting, and it held my attention.
It just wasn't the subject I thought I would be learning about
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- Anonymous User
- 2023-05-18
*Witch-hunts in the western world
Hardly any talk of witchcraft outside of persecution or the perview of the church’s view, and the views of those accusing others of witchcraft.
Not a bad course but an awful misleading by title. Witchcraft is far more than simple prosecution in medieval ages and modern eras and there is no focus whatsoever on the practice as it is performed in modern era or older times based on what we know and living tradition in Italian and Spanish cultures.
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