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‘Wolfgang Behringer establishes the importance of a truly global history of witchcraft. Setting aside familiar Western notions, he deploys a more comprehensive definition of witchcraft as the malicious use of evil magic. He brilliantly sketches the history of European witch-hunting and uses this to illuminate the twentieth-century struggle against witches in many parts of the post-colonial world such as South America, India, Indonesia, Malaysia and Papua New Guinea. This book marks a real advance in our understanding of witchcraft, and a remarkable and astute blending of anthropology with history.’
H. C. Erik Midelfort, C. Julian Bishko Professor
of History and Religious Studies, University
of Virginia |
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‘Witchcraft has recently been the subject of an enormous amount of research and yet some of its main issues still need reappraisal. This book makes a compelling case for re-examining witchcraft in a fundamental way by reconnecting the new historical scholarship with the discipline of anthropology and treating the subject in a world perspective and as a universal phenomenon. Already Europe's leading expert on the early modern witchcraft trials, Wolfgang Behringer not only gives us a superb overview of where our knowledge of them currently stands but takes us on a global tour of witchcraft in modern societies. Unexpectedly, we discover how much the European and non-European experience have had in common.’ Professor Stuart Clark, History Department, |
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Klappentext
In this major new book, Wolfgang Behringer surveys
the phenomenon of witchcraft past and present.
Drawing on the latest historical and anthropological
findings, Behringer sheds new light on the history of
European witchcraft, while demonstrating that
witch-hunts are not simply part of the European past.
Although witch-hunts have long since been outlawed in
Europe, other societies have struggled with the idea
that witchcraft does not exist. As Behringer shows,
witch-hunts continue to pose a major problem in
Africa and among tribal people in America, Asia and
Australia. The belief that certain people are able to
cause harm by supernatural powers endures throughout
the world today. Printed in the United Kingdom
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Universität des Saarlandes, Lehrstuhl für Frühe Neuzeit, Prof. Dr. Behringer