Available for academic research purposes
Open Access
Copyright Author(s)
Content licence CC BY 4.0
Metadata licence CC0 1.0
This is original content, published in Open Access. It is also available to read for free online at https://media.fupress.com/files/pdf/24/1590/1590_21216
It is available to read for free online
It is available for online purchase at https://books.fupress.com/isbn/9788884538093
Yet another book on witches and witchcraft? Although numerous, studies on this phenomenon that had such a profound influence on the political, social and religious history of the late Middle Ages and the early modern age in Europe can never be enough. At this time the political regimes were actively involved in the witch hunts, not least the Catholic church which was intensely engaged in developing instruments of control aimed at governing and curbing dissent. The book is broken down into thematic sections – rules, treatises and trials, transmission /possession – which reflect the multiplicity of the scientific proposals that have emerged in recent years, and also represent a conscious preliminary orientation of possible readings. At centre stage of the witchcraft show are the witches and their judges, from the theologians and philosophers to the exorcists. As well as addressing actual events, the book also explores the nature of the beliefs and the way in which they were transmitted in the various social strata, and the phenomenon of diabolical possession which conveyed the message of the presence of the devil in the world.
Ancora un volume su streghe e stregoneria? Anche se numerose, non sono mai abbastanza le ricerche su questo fenomeno che ha profondamente segnato la storia politica, sociale e religiosa del tardo Medioevo e della prima età moderna in Europa. I soggetti attori – dalle streghe ai loro giudici, dai teologi ai filosofi agli esorcisti – sono qui al centro della scena sul grande palcoscenico della stregoneria. E, assieme alle loro vicende, il libro guarda alle credenze, ai modi della loro trasmissione nei diversi ceti sociali, al fenomeno della possessione diabolica attraverso cui si veicolava il messaggio della presenza del demonio nel mondo. Rassegna stampa: Donne e conoscenza storica, 20 febbraio 2011
It is available online at https://doi.org/10.36253/978-88-8453-809-3