Description: Witchcraft and its Transformations, c.1650-c.1750 by Ian Bostridge This is a study of the significance of witchcraft in English public life in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Ian Bostridge explores contemporary beliefs about witchcraft and shows how it remained a serious concern across the spectrum of political opinion. FORMAT Hardcover LANGUAGE English CONDITION Brand New Publisher Description This book is about the significance of witchcraft in English public life (c.1650-c.1750), and deals with contemporary opinion regarding its theological, philosophical, and legal dimensions. Ian Bostridge discusses civil war politics, the writings of Thomas Hobbes, the debate about witchcraft at the time of the Glorious Revolution, and the disputes surrounding the repeal of Jacobean witchcraft legislation in 1736. He also examines the work of less familiar writersand propagandists such as Richard Boulton, Francis Hutchinson, and James Erskine of Grange, and balances this account of the gradual demise of witchcraft theory in Britain with a comparative case studyof the debate in France. Finally, by asserting that witchcraft remained a serious topic of debate well into the eighteenth century, and that its descent into polite ridicule had as much to do with politics as with the birth of reason, Witchcraft and its Transformations offers a lively critique of current interpretations of English popular culture and political change. Author Biography Ian Bostridge is a young British tenor making his mark on the opera and concert stage. He sings full-time, but is also writing a book, provisionally entitled "Being a Singer", to be published by Methuen in 1998. Review arresting and thought-provoking book./ IWitchcraft and its TransformationsI is quite a Itour de forceI, full of fascinating insights,... it represents the best account currently available of Defoes thought on such subjects; it gives a perceptive account of the imagery of witchcraft in popular prints in the eighteenth century./ Michael Hunter, Birkbeck College, London, Eighteenth Century Life, Vol 22, no. 2, May 1998.`he does provide some valuable suggestions supported by highly selective but interesting texts ... Bostridge draws on a wide range of philosophers and political and religious thinkers.T. O. Beidelman, Anthropos`a scholarly book to be published in MayThe Economist (UK) January 1997`Ian Bostridge offers a challenging new perspective.Bernard Capp, American Historical Review`learned, sound, unswervingly focused on the elite, and devoid of any violently original ideas likely to upset his mentors ... The queasy relationship between words and witches awaits further invesigation, but Bostridge has made an interesting beginning.Dione Purkiss, Journal of the History of the Behavioual Sciences`this is clearly a very significant work, characterized throughout by the deployment of a keen historical imagination allied to a scrupulous regard for evidence ... Perhaps the greatest contribution of this book, however, is the intellectual history approach to English witchcraft ...J.A. Sharpe, University of York, English Historical Review, June 1999`Bostridge challenges the traditional argument that belief in witchcraft among educated elites was waning in the second half of the seventeenth century. Bostridge leaves no doubt that among the educated, withcraft was taken seriously long after the restoration. A diachronic analysis of witchcraft beliefs, emphasizing the time when they lost their intellectual respectability.Brian Levack, Albion Long Description This book is about the significance of witchcraft in English public life (c.1650-c.1750), and deals with contemporary opinion regarding its theological, philosophical, and legal dimensions. Ian Bostridge discusses civil war politics, the writings of Thomas Hobbes, the debate about witchcraft at the time of the Glorious Revolution, and the disputes surrounding the repeal of Jacobean witchcraft legislation in 1736. He also examines the work of less familiar writersand propagandists such as Richard Boulton, Francis Hutchinson, and James Erskine of Grange, and balances this account of the gradual demise of witchcraft theory in Britain with a comparative case studyof the debate in France. Finally, by asserting that witchcraft remained a serious topic of debate well into the eighteenth century, and that its descent into polite ridicule had as much to do with politics as with the birth of reason, Witchcraft and its Transformations offers a lively critique of current interpretations of English popular culture and political change. Review Text arresting and thought-provoking book./ IWitchcraft and its TransformationsI is quite a Itour de forceI, full of fascinating insights,... it represents the best account currently available of Defoes thought on such subjects; it gives a perceptive account of the imagery of witchcraft in popular prints in the eighteenth century./ Michael Hunter, Birkbeck College, London, Eighteenth Century Life, Vol 22, no. 2, May 1998.`he does provide some valuable suggestions supported by highly selective but interesting texts ... Bostridge draws on a wide range of philosophers and political and religious thinkers.T. O. Beidelman, Anthropos`a scholarly book to be published in MayThe Economist (UK) January 1997`Ian Bostridge offers a challenging new perspective.Bernard Capp, American Historical Review`learned, sound, unswervingly focused on the elite, and devoid of any violently original ideas likely to upset his mentors ... The queasy relationship between words and witches awaits further invesigation, but Bostridge has made an interesting beginning.Dione Purkiss, Journal of the History of the Behavioual Sciences`this is clearly a very significant work, characterized throughout by the deployment of a keen historical imagination allied to a scrupulous regard for evidence ... Perhaps the greatest contribution of this book, however, is the intellectual history approach to English witchcraft ...J.A. Sharpe, University of York, English Historical Review, June 1999`Bostridge challenges the traditional argument that belief in witchcraft among educated elites was waning in the second half of the seventeenth century. Bostridge leaves no doubt that among the educated, withcraft was taken seriously long after the restoration. A diachronic analysis of witchcraft beliefs, emphasizing the time when they lost their intellectual respectability.Brian Levack, Albion Review Quote this is clearly a very significant work, characterized throughout by the deployment of a keen historical imagination allied to a scrupulous regard for evidence ... Perhaps the greatest contribution of this book, however, is the intellectual history approach to English witchcraft ...J.A. Sharpe, University of York, English Historical Review, June 1999 Feature Outstanding range of citations, literary and visual, from Hobbes, Locke and Defoe to less-known propagandists. Details ISBN0198206534 Author Ian Bostridge Short Title WITCHCRAFT & ITS TRANSFORMATIO Series Oxford Historical Monographs Language English ISBN-10 0198206534 ISBN-13 9780198206538 Media Book Format Hardcover Year 1997 Imprint Clarendon Press Place of Publication Oxford Country of Publication United Kingdom Illustrations frontispiece, 9 halftones Pages 288 Position Former British Academy Postdoctoral Fellow, Corpus Christi College, Oxford UK Release Date 1997-03-27 AU Release Date 1997-03-27 NZ Release Date 1997-03-27 Birth 1875 Death 1955 Affiliation Research Fellow in the Department of Classics, University College, Dublin Qualifications M.D. Publisher Oxford University Press Publication Date 1997-03-27 DEWEY 133.430942 Audience Professional & Vocational We've got this At The Nile, if you're looking for it, we've got it. With fast shipping, low prices, friendly service and well over a million items - you're bound to find what you want, at a price you'll love! 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ISBN-13: 9780198206538
Book Title: Witchcraft and Its Transformations, C.1650-C.1750
Item Height: 224mm
Item Width: 146mm
Author: Ian Bostridge
Format: Hardcover
Language: English
Topic: Witchcraft, Religious History, History
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication Year: 1997
Type: Textbook
Item Weight: 534g
Number of Pages: 288 Pages