Darrera modificació: 2010-01-28 Bases de dades: Sciència.cat
Kieckhefer, Richard, Magic in the Middle Ages, Cambridge - Nova York, Cambridge University Press (Cambridge medieval textbooks), 1989, x + 219 pp.. il.
- Resum
- This textbook deals with magic, both natural and demonic, within the broad context of medieval culture. Covering the years c. 500 to 1500, with a chapter on antiquity, it invesigates the way magic relates to the many other cultural forms of the time, such as religion and science, literature and art. The book begins with a full discussion of the social history of magic and of the ways in which magical beliefs borrowed from a diversity of cultures. Thereafter, within a wider study of the growth and development of the phenomenon, the author shows how magic served as a point of contact between the popular and elite classes, how the reality of beliefs is reflected in the fiction witchcraft led to changes in the law. The chapter on medieval literature, and how the permagicalsecution of magic and er on necromancy is the most original, based largely on unpublished manuscripts and arguing for a new interpretation of the material. Adopting an interdisciplinary approach Professor Kieckhefer has taken magic from its cultural isolation and placed it firmly at the crossroads of medieval culture, as a focal point for our understanding of many other aspects of medieval history.
Contents:
* 1. Introduction: magic as a crossroads
* 2. The classical inheritance
* 3. The twilight of paganism: magic in Norse and Irish culture
* 4. The common tradition of medieval magic
* 5. The romance of magic in courtly culture
* 6. Arabic learning and the occult sciences
* 7. Necromancy in the clerical underworld
* 8. Prohibition, condemnation, and prosecution
- Matèries
- Màgia
- Notes
- Reimpr.: 1990, 2000.
Trad. esp.: La magia en la Edad Media, Barcelona, Crítica, 1992.
Trad. al.: Magie im Mittelalter, Munic, Beck, 1992.
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