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Witchcraft course: - Faculty of Humanities - McMaster University

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Lyndal Roper, Oedipus and the Devil: <strong>Witchcraft</strong> Religion and Sexuality in Early Modern<br />

Europe (1994).<br />

Monday March 18<br />

Week 11: Psychoanalysis (Part II)<br />

John Demos, “Underlying themes in the <strong>Witchcraft</strong> <strong>of</strong> Seventeenth Century England.” AHR<br />

75 (1970): 1311-1326.<br />

Charles Zika, “Cannibalism and <strong>Witchcraft</strong> in Early Modern Europe: Reading the Visual<br />

Images,” The History Workshop Journal 44 (1997): 77-105.<br />

March 25: Post-modernism<br />

Gilderhus, ch. 7<br />

Week 12:<br />

Ques: What do these scholars mean by the “dis<strong>course</strong>s” or “narratives” <strong>of</strong> magic and<br />

witchcraft? What do they mean? How is this approach fruitful?<br />

Alison Rowlands, “Telling <strong>Witchcraft</strong> stories: new perspectives on <strong>Witchcraft</strong> and Witches in<br />

the Early Modern Period,” Gender and History 10 (1998):<br />

Michael Bailey, “The Meanings <strong>of</strong> Magic,” Magic, Ritual and <strong>Witchcraft</strong> 1 (2006):<br />

April 1<br />

Week 13: TBA<br />

April 8<br />

Week 14: No class. Submit final paper<br />

6

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