Gender And Witchcraft Essay

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In a predominantly patriarchal society, European women have not only been omitted from most of the historical narratives, but their experiences were further deemed inconsequential or presented in a distorted manner. It comes with no surprise as many seventeenth century religious views stripped women from their Pagan cultural importance, just to have them demonized as witches. Though it has been pointed out to be an exaggeration to state that the crime of witchcraft was sex specific and solely attributed to women it remains undeniable and quite compelling the role of gendered structures of power in the European witch hunts. The aim of this essay is to examine the relationship between gender and witchcraft, as well as the rise in misogyny in early modern Europe. This will be achieved by looking at scholarship surrounding the impact of the witch-hunting treatises by Johannes Nider, Heinrich Kramer and James Sprenger, respectively titled, the Formicarius and the Malleus Maleficarum. Alongside an examination of the question: “what did gender have to do with witch hunting in early modern Europe” by arguing that gender and misogyny are important issues in understanding what Barstow calls ‘sexual terrorism’ as quote – “whilst witches were almost always women, they were invariably tried, judged, jailed, examined, and executed by men” .
To start with, any discussion about witchcraft must define exactly what a “witch” is, which is somewhat hard to do because of its polysomic baggage. In the early fifteenth century, the Latin word maleficus was often used by Nider and other authorities instead of witch. Maleficus basically translates to ‘a person who performed harmful sorcery’ or maleficium. This ‘harmful sorcery’ also included ‘theft or mu...

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...milar ‘rebellious women supposedly guilty of witchcraft’, brings the student in the dialogue to exclaim: “I cannot wonder enough how the fragile sex should dare to rush into such presumptions.” He then provides an elucidation of female inclination for witchcraft, basing his argument on ‘longstanding Christian conceptions of the physical, mental, and spiritual weaknesses of women, and their greater susceptibility to the temptations of the devil.’ Nider also believed that women had ‘the potential for extreme good, however, when they did not reach this potential, they sank into the ‘worst of evils.’ Both Nider and Kramer used evidence in their pieces cited from apparent authoritative sources for their arguments about the extent of women’s inclination to evil. However, these ideas were not new and were in fact borrowed heavily from the tradition of western misogyny .

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