In the courtrooms of seventeenth-century Russia, the great
majority of those accused of witchcraft were male, in sharp
contrast to the profile of accused witches across Catholic and
Protestant Europe in the same period. While European courts
targeted and executed overwhelmingly female suspects, often on
charges of compacting with the devil, the tsars' courts vigorously
pursued men and some women accused of practicing more down-to-earth
magic, using poetic spells and home-grown potions. Instead of
Satanism or heresy, the primary concern in witchcraft testimony in
Russia involved efforts to use magic to subvert, mitigate, or
avenge the harsh conditions of patriarchy, serfdom, and social
hierarchy.
Broadly comparative and richly illustrated with color plates,
Desperate Magic places the trials of witches in the context of
early modern Russian law, religion, and society. Piecing together
evidence from trial records to illuminate some of the central
puzzles of Muscovite history, Kivelson explores the interplay among
the testimony of accusers, the leading questions of the
interrogators, and the confessions of the accused. Assembled, they
create a picture of a shared moral vision of the world that crossed
social divides. Because of the routine use of torture in extracting
and shaping confessions, Kivelson addresses methodological and
ideological questions about the Muscovite courts' equation of pain
and truth, questions with continuing resonance in the world today.
Within a moral economy that paired unquestioned hierarchical
inequities with expectations of reciprocity, magic and suspicions
of magic emerged where those expectations were most egregiously
violated.
Witchcraft in Russia surfaces as one of the ways that oppression
was contested by ordinary people scrambling to survive in a
fiercely inequitable world. Masters and slaves, husbands and wives,
and officers and soldiers alike believed there should be limits to
exploitation and saw magic deployed at the junctures where
hierarchical order veered into violent excess.
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