Witchcraft and Magic in Pre-Modern Europe

HIS4104.01
Course System Home Terms Fall 2018 Witchcraft and Magic in Pre-Modern Europe

Course Description

Summary

What is magic? What is a witch? Who is a witch? And in the increasingly rational culture of Europe after the Renaissance, how and why did nearly 100,000 people – predominantly women – come to be tried for the crime of witchcraft? In many ways, the investigation of these questions hangs on another question: how do we differentiate science, magic, and religion? In premodern Europe, there were no clear boundaries separating these ways of knowing. This course investigates these questions, mapping them onto the interplay of old and new ideas about magic, alchemy, gender, the heavens, and the occult in premodern Europe.

Prerequisites

Prerequisite: 1 course in History. Interested students should email Carol Pal (cpal@bennington.edu) between May 9th and May 12th with Witchcraft and Magic in the subject line. Include a few sentences to tell me: (1) how you meet the prerequisite; and (2) how this course fits into your Plan. Enrollment in this class will be made on a first-come, first-served basis, based on the information in your email.

Please contact the faculty member :

Instructor

  • Carol Pal

Day and Time

Academic Term

Fall 2018

Credits

4

Course Level

4000

Maximum Enrollment

15