Malevolent Nurture: Witch-hunting and Maternal Power in Early Modern England

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Cornell University Press, 1995 - 264 páginas

Why were women far more likely than men to be executed for witchcraft in the early modern period? Questioning approaches that focus narrowly on the male role in witch-hunting in England and Scotland, Deborah Willis examines the fact that women were also frequently the accusers.Willis draws on the strengths of feminist, new historicist, and psychoanalytic criticism and on such primary sources as legal documents, pamphlet literature, religious tracts, and stage plays. Both the witch and her female accuser, Willis concludes, were engaged in a complex, intricate struggle for survival and empowerment in a patriarchal culture, and they stood in uneasy relation to definitions of female identity that rewarded nurturing behavior.Malevolent Nurture disentangles popular images of the witch from those endorsed by male elites. Among villagers, the witch was most typically imagined as a malevolent mother, while elites preferred to view her as a betraying servant of Satan. Analyzing King James VI and I's involvement in the North Berwick witchcraft trials, Willis shows how his elite atittudes were nevertheless influenced by his relationships with his brith mother, Mary Queen of Scots, and another maternal figure, Queen Elizabeth I.Willis also shows that Shakespeare, in Richard III, Macbeth, and Henry VI, and other middle-class playwrights incorporated the beliefs of the ruling class and villagers alike in their representations of witches.

Dentro del libro

Contenido

TWO UnNeighborly Nurture
27
THREE Rewriting the Witch
83
FOUR James among the WitchHunters
117
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Acerca del autor (1995)

Deborah Willis was born and raised in Calgary, Alberta, Canada. Her work has appeared in Grain, Event, Prism International, The Walrus, and Zoetrope. Her books include Vanishing and Other Stories and The Dark and Other Love Stories.

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