Witchcraft and Gender in Early Modern Society

£45.99

Witchcraft and Gender in Early Modern Society

Finland and the Wider European Experience

Language teaching and learning History and Archaeology Social and cultural history

Author: Raisa Maria Toivo

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Collection: Women and Gender in the Early Modern World

Language: English

Published by: Routledge

Published on: 5th December 2016

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 2 Mb

ISBN: 9781351872621


Introduction

How could a woman be three times accused of witchcraft and go on running a successful farmstead? Why would men use a frying pan for cattle magic? Why did witches keep talking about the children? What kind of a relation did Finnish witches have with authority and power?

Study Focus

These are among the questions Raisa Maria Toivo addresses in this study, as she explores the gender implications of the complex system of household management and public representation in which seventeenth-century Finnish women and men negotiated their positions.

Methodology and Themes

From specific case studies, Toivo broadens her narrative to include historiographical discussion on the history of witchcraft, on women’s and gender history and on early modern social history, shedding new light on each theme.

Contributions to Historiography

Toivo contributes to the on-going discussion in the European historiography about whether the early modern period witnessed an improvement, decline, or simply alteration in the conditions of oppression of women within patriarchal households by using a multidimensional set of roles that could be adopted by women.

Concluding Insights

Finally, she demonstrates convincingly that members of the solid peasant class were not only subject of the newly forming states, but also avid users of the court system, which they manipulated and put to work in the interests of their own individual, household, and collective affairs.

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