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The Visions of Isobel Gowdie - Magic, Witchcraft and Dark Shamanism in Seventeenth-Century Scotland (Paperback, New ed)
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The Visions of Isobel Gowdie - Magic, Witchcraft and Dark Shamanism in Seventeenth-Century Scotland (Paperback, New ed)
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The confessions of Isobel Gowdie are widely recognised as the most
extraordinary on record in Britain. Their descriptive power and
vivid imagery have attracted considerable interest on both academic
and popular levels. Among historians, the confessions are
celebrated for providing a unique insight into the way fairy
beliefs and witch beliefs interacted in the early modern mind; more
controversially, they are also cited as evidence for the existence
of Shamanistic visionary traditions, of pre-Christian origin, in
Scotland in this period. On a popular level the confessions of
Isobel Gowdie have, above any other British witch-trial records,
influenced the formation of the ritual traditions of Wicca. The
author's discovery of the original trial records (currently being
authenticated by the National Archives of Scotland), deemed lost
for nearly 200 years, provides a starting point for an
interdisciplinary look at the confessions and the woman behind
them. Using historical, psychological, comparative religious and
anthropological perspectives this book sets out to separate the
voice of Isobel Gowdie from that of her interrogators, and to
determine the experiences and beliefs which may have generated her
confessions. The book explores: How far did those accused of
witchcraft self-consciously practice harmful magic? Did they really
believe themselves to have made a Pact with an envisioned Devil?
Did they ever participate in ecstatic cult rituals? The author
argues that close analysis of Isobel's testimony supports the view
that in seventeenth-century Britain popular spirituality was shaped
by a deep interaction between Christian teachings and shamanistic
visionary traditions, of pre-Christian origin. These findings
confirm the value of witchcraft confessions as unique windows into
the complexities of the early modern religious imagination.
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