Defining Dominion: The Discourses of Magic and Witchcraft in Early Modern France and Germany

Front Cover
University of Michigan Press, 1995 - History - 234 pages
In this intriguing volume, Gerhild Scholz Williams explores the roles of magic and demonology in France and Germany in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. She guides the reader through a variety of texts--many of them popular and influential in their day--to illuminate how magic came to shape people's perceptions of a changing world. This comprehensive study looks at magic as an intellectual and cultural language, as an attempt to explain the world, and as a means to control and confine women, whose propensity for satanic dalliance threatened not just their own souls but the health of the larger society.
". . . Williams has done an exemplary job of analyzing the intersection of the discourses of magic (as related to women and witchcraft), discovery, and religious diversity/dissidence to explain how the confluence of these discourses eventually 'determined who occupied society's center and who was forced to move to, or remain at, its margins.' . . . Gerhild Scholz Williams is no dilettante grazing in the greener pastures of other disciplines. She has been laboring assiduously in these neighboring fields for years now, and it is breathtaking to see how all of her disparate projects have come together so elegantly articulated in this one volume." --Susan L. Cocalis, German Studies Review
Gerhild Scholz Williams is Professor of German and Comparative Literature, Washington University, St. Louis.
 

Contents

Introduction
1
Magic and the Myth of Transgression Melusine de Lusignan
23
Magic and the Science of Man and Woman Theophrastus Bombastus von Hohenheim called Paracelsus
45
Magic and Gender The Struggle for Control in the Witchcraft Tracts of Kramer Weyer and Bodin
65
Magic and the Margins Pierre de Lancre
89
Magic and Religious Diversity The Discourses of Belonging and Exclusion
121
Notes
147
Works Cited
201
Index
229
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

Bibliographic information