Genderising the Salem Witchhunt (Feminist Piece) - Paul Boyer and Stephen Nissenbaum's Salem Possessed and The Devil in the Shape of a Woman by Carol Karlsen
Title: Genderising the Salem Witchhunt (Feminist Piece) - Paul Boyer and Stephen Nissenbaum's Salem Possessed and The Devil in the Shape of a Woman by Carol Karlsen
Category: /History/North American History
Details: Words: 1015 | Pages: 4 (approximately 235 words/page)
Genderising the Salem Witchhunt (Feminist Piece) - Paul Boyer and Stephen Nissenbaum's Salem Possessed and The Devil in the Shape of a Woman by Carol Karlsen
Category: /History/North American History
Details: Words: 1015 | Pages: 4 (approximately 235 words/page)
This paper will discuss and contrast the works of both Paul Boyer and Stephen Nissenbaum's Salem Possessed and The Devil in the Shape of a Woman by Carol Karlsen. These papers contrast in their reasoning behind the Salem trials and the subsequent timing of it in 1692. It must be clear that whilst Paul Boyer and Stephen Nissenbaum's discuss a whole series of mitigating factors that leads to the trials in Salem the authors do not
showed first 75 words of 1015 total
You are viewing only a small portion of the paper.
Please login or register to access the full copy.
Please login or register to access the full copy.
showed last 75 words of 1015 total
complete justice to the specific timing (and reasoning) of the Salem trials in 1692.
References
Karlsen C, The devil in the shape of a woman; Witchcraft in Colonial New England, New York, Norton, 1987
Boyer P & Nissenbaum S, Salem possessed; the social origins of Witchcraft (1974), Cambridge, Harvard University Press, 1974
Further Reading
Gragg L, The Salem Witch Crisis, New York, Praeger, 1992
Reis E, Damned Woman: Sinners and Witches in Puritan New England, Ithaca, Cornell University Press, 1970