WITCHCRAFT

a form of sorcery, or the magical manipulation of nature for self-aggrandizement, or for the benefit or harm of a client. This manipulation often involves the use of spirit-helpers, or familiars.

Public uses of magic are generally considered beneficial; sorcery, on the other hand, is commonly practiced in private and is usually considered malevolent. Nevertheless, accusations of sorcery are frequently public and explicit. Anthropologists have observed that in societies that lack formal political processes, sorcery accusations are often an indication of other social and economic tensions and conflicts. They have analyzed the killing of accused sorcerers as a form of control through which antisocial people are eliminated and social cohesion is reinforced. Anthropologists distinguish sorcerers, who acquire their powers through study and initiation, from witches, who inherit their powers. In some cultures, especially European, however, the two terms are used interchangeably.

European diabolical witchcraft was a form of sorcery that appealed to pre-Christian symbolism and was associated by Church leaders with heresy. The origins of witchcraft in Europe are found in the pre-Christian, pagan cults such as the Teutonic nature cults; Roman religion; and the speculations of the Gnostics (see Gnosticism), the Zoroastrians, and the Manicheans. These religions and philosophies believed in a power of evil and a power of good within the universe. Later, among certain sects, the worship of good was repudiated as false and misleading.

Religious persecution of supposed witches commenced early in the 14th cent. Trials, convictions, and executions became common throughout Europe and reached a peak during the 16th and 17th cent. Under the authority of the Spanish Inquisition, as many as 100 persons were burned as witches in a single day. The auto-da-fé, as this mass burning was called, took on the qualities of a carnival, where one could buy souvenirs, rosaries, holy images, and food. Suspicion also fell on many who were interested in scientific experimentation. The colonies of North America shared in this fanaticism, particularly in Salem, Mass., where in 1692, 20 persons were executed as witches. (The state exonerated all the accused men and women in 1711.)

Early students of European diabolical witchcraft viewed it alternately as an invention of elites who used accusations of sorcery as an excuse to persecute people for material gain, or as a survival of pre-Christian folk religion. Scholars today seek to interpret it not as a single phenomenon but rather as a complex pattern of beliefs and practices that have been used in different ways at different times. Thus, during the Hundred Year Wars, Catholics and Protestants accused each other of witchcraft.

In the 20th cent. there has been a revival of witchcraft known as Wicca, or neopaganism. This form of witchcraft has nothing to do with sorcery, and is instead based on a reverence for nature, the worship of a fertility goddess, a restrained hedonism, and group magic aimed at healing. It rejects a belief in Satan as a product of Christian doctrine that is incompatible with paganism.

See also shaman.

Bibliography

See J. B. Russell, Witchcraft in the Middle Ages (1972); P. Boyer and S. Nissenbaum, Salem Possessed (1974); J. P. Demos, Entertaining Satan (1982); C. Larner, Witchcraft and Religion (1984); S. C. Lehmann and J. E. Myers, Magic, Witchcraft, and Religion (1985); R. E. Guiley, The Encyclopedia of Witches and Witchcraft (1989); R. Briggs, Witches and Neighbors (1996); L. W. Carlson, A Fever in Salem (1999); M. B. Norton, In the Devil's Snare: The Salem Witchcraft Crisis of 1692 (2002).

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Witchcraft  - 9202 results

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3. WITCHCRAFT AND THE SOCIAL STRUCTURE Recent studies of witchcraft have concentrated on how witchcraft accusations are related to the whole social structure rather than individual tensions. Instead of seeing witchcraft as the result of the conflict...
...anthropological circles to consider witchcraft as simply due to kinship stresses and...Whether the whole range of belief in witchcraft can be explained away like this is another...provide fertile soil for accusations of witchcraft. It is a remarkable fact, noted by...
believe in the possibility of witchcraft and the veracity of some relations of witchcraft. 32 This is a pattern to be found all over...overarching points to make: first, theories of witchcraft were far more robust than previous accounts...
...members had already largely abandoned witchcraft as a mechanism of accusation by the...mutually exclusive meanings of the term witchcraft. For instance, there were, and still...another contemporary usage of the term witchcraft signifying ritual black magic, as in...
telligibility of witchcraft belief remain to be resolved in the...These different sensibilities toward witchcraft are evident even in the descriptive...collective public actions against witchcraft as witchfinding movements in appreciation...
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journal articles on: Witchcraft  - 1963 results

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Witchcraft and the Limits of Mass...ethnographic case by considering witchcraft and one particular form...balance between sorcery and witchcraft is precarious, also evident...insight that there are many witchcrafts that speak to many things...
Witchcraft, female aggression, and power in the...generation ago the study of European witchcraft was revolutionized by a "paradigm shift...decades. The early modem discourse on witchcraft, it is generally agreed, developed...
THE DYNAMICS OF WITCHCRAFT AND INDIGENOUS SHRINES AMONG THE AKAN...development (Rowlands, 1995: 37), then witchcraft is perceived as a `traditional obstacle...colonial African states defined witchcraft as a superstitious vestige of a rejected...
Witchcraft and the avoidance of physical violence...the second, with persecution and witchcraft; and the third with the fate and mischance...Pritchard has shown that beliefs about witchcraft are linked with misfortune, jealousy...
Nursing nothing: Witchcraft and female sexuality in The Winters...text of The Winters Tale associates witchcraft with voracious sexuality, perverted...then suggests that performance is witchcraft. Shakespeares reappropriation of...
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magazine articles on: Witchcraft  - 547 results

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WITCHCRAFT THE SPELL THAT DIDNT BREAK by Owen Davies...Davies argues that a widespread belief in witchcraft persisted in eighteenth- and nineteenth...starting to realise that the history of witchcraft does not end with the execution of the...
A Skeptical Look at African Witchcraft and Religion by Leo Igwe WITCHCRAFT IS A PREVALENT BELIEF AND PRACTICE on the African...Witch-Bound Africa. According to Melland, it is witchcraft that poisons the tribal life of the Luanda people...
The Witches of Gambaga: Belief in Witchcraft Is Still Widespread in Africa, and...witch camp. Sacrificial rites Belief in witchcraft is widespread across Africa, thriving...visit a doctor. When an accusation of witchcraft is made, the accused is totally ostracised...
...Snowman meets the historian of witches and witchcraft in Early Modern Europe by Daniel Snowman...the experiences of women accused of witchcraft in southern Germany in early modern...of the history and historiography of witchcraft, sexuality and religion in early modern...
Cornells Witchcraft Collection of Rare Books to Be Published Online by Primary Source Media Witchcraft scholars and enthusiasts no longer have...access its worldrenowned primary source witchcraft collection, because Primary Source Media...
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newspaper articles on: Witchcraft  - 1376 results

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Witchcraft, War Make Gregorys Latest Lively...series is the best yet, a lively tale of witchcraft and romance set amid civil wars in England...discovered Jacquetta had been tried for witchcraft and came from a family supposedly descended...
Real Life Casts a Spell; Sisters Witchcraft Inspires Writers Spooky Play. Byline...Tupperware party...but with vodka and witchcraft. Born in a family of nine, Des has...sisters got together one night to cast a witchcraft spell on the girlfriend of one of their...
Air Force Witchcraft; Political Correctness Casts a Spell on the Armed Forces. Byline: THE WASHINGTON TIMES The U.S. militarys success in Pakistan...
Witchcraft lore draws all kinds to Salem by Melanie...where 19 men and women accused of witchcraft were hanged in the late 17th century...accused and, in many cases, convicted of witchcraft. The trials continued until October...
Shane: My Spell of Witchcraft; Exclusive Love Island: Bros Nans...has confessed he was heavily into witchcraft and even joined a cult. Shane has...has never spoken publicly about his witchcraft past, admitted: "I was with a...
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encyclopedia articles on: Witchcraft  - 34 results

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WITCHCRAFT a form of sorcery, or the magical manipulation...interchangeably. European diabolical witchcraft was a form of sorcery that appealed...leaders with heresy. The origins of witchcraft in Europe are found in the pre-Christian...
...for his part in the Salem, Mass., witchcraft trials. The book, published in London...it, generally condemned the view of witchcraft then prevailing and had a salutary effect...reprinted in S. G. Drake, comp., The Witchcraft Delusion in New England (3 vol...
...Increase Mather and took office in 1692. In the great witchcraft mania, he appointed a commission to try those accused of witchcraft. However, when his own wife was accused of witchcraft, he ordered an end to the trials. Many disputes won...
...original charter contributed to the witchcraft panic that reached its climax in Salem...refusing to confess to the practice of witchcraft. The Salem trials ended abruptly when...1927 30, repr. 1966); C. Hansen, Witchcraft at Salem (1969); G. Lewis, The...
...demons or of black magic. See also voodoo ; witchcraft . See J. Frazer, The Golden Bough (12...1961); J. Middleton, comp., Magic, Witchcraft, and Curing (1967); M. Marwick, Witchcraft and Sorcery (1970); M. Christopher...
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