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Sorcières pourchassées, assumées, puissantes, queer = : Witches hunted appropriated empowered queered
ISBN: 9782917855362 Year: 2013 Publisher: Montreuil : B42, la Maison populaire,

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Abstract

Il existe au moins trois types de sorcières : celles qui pratiquent la sorcellerie, celles qui sont qualifiées de sorcières (par le judiciaire, les institutions religieuses ou l?opinion publique) et celles qui s?autoproclament sorcières sans pour autant pratiquer la sorcellerie. Ces deux dernières catégories, qui résultent d?une construction sociale et envisagent cette figure comme métaphore, forment l?objet de ce livre. Sorcières : pourchassées, assumées, puissantes, queer mêle récits historiques, littérature de fiction, expériences militantes, propositions théoriques et considérations artistiques pour constituer un ouvrage pluridisciplinaire sur le genre, le mythe et l?altérité. Quarante ans après l?émergence de la sorcière comme symbole radical dans l?imaginaire militant et à l?heure où de supposées sorcières continuent d?être persécutées dans certaines parties du monde.


Book
Yamamba
Authors: ---
ISBN: 1611729483 9781611729481 1611720664 9781611720662 Year: 2021 Publisher: Berkeley, California

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Abstract

Women, Magic, Wisdom: Explore a Japanese myth through the words and images of key scholars and artists.

The witch as muse : art, gender, and power in early modern Europe
Authors: ---
ISBN: 9780812238693 0812238699 Year: 2005 Publisher: Philadelphia, PA University of Pennsylvania Press

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Abstract

Occult topics have long fascinated artists, and the subject of witches their imagined bodies and fantastic rituals was a popular one for painters and printmakers in early modern Europe. Focusing on several artists in depth, Linda C. Hults probes the historical and theoretical contexts of their work to examine the ways witches were depicted and the motivations for those depictions. 
While studying the work of such artists as Dürer, Baldung, Jacques de Gheyn II, and Goya, Hults discerns patterns suggesting that the imagery of witchcraft served both as an expression of artistic license and as a tool of self-promotion for the artists. These imagined images of witches were designed to catch the attention of powerful and important patrons as witchcraft was being debated in political and intellectual centers. Dürer's early engravings of witnesses made in the wake of the Malleus maleficarum of 1487 were crucial in linking the seductive or aged female form with the dangers of witchcraft. The polarized idea of gender pervaded many aspects of early modern culture, including art theory. As the deluded female witch embodied the abuse of imagination and fantasy, so the male artist presented himself as putting those faculties to productive and reasoned use.


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