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Witch: The Wild Ride from Wicked to Wicca [Hardcover]

Candace Savage
2.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 144 pages
  • Publisher: British Museum Press; 1st Edition edition (Oct 2001)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0714127604
  • ISBN-13: 978-0714127606
  • Product Dimensions: 21.6 x 17.6 x 2 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 2.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 1,323,202 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Candace Savage
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Product Description

Product Description

The witch has always been a figure electric with possibility and, sometimes, with menace. A legendary shapeshifter, she has recast her image to fulfil the dreams and nightmares of each passing century. She is the devouring mother, the vengeful wife, the possessed devil worshipper, the resentful old hag and the high priestess. Yet throughout her proud and painful history, she has remained shrouded in mystery. This book views her portrayal from 15th century Europe to the present day and includes literary and visual representations of witchcraft.

About the Author

Candace Savage is the author of numerous intemationally acclaimed books, including Beauty Queens, Cowgirls, Aurora and Bird Brains.

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Customer Reviews

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful
By A Customer
Format:Paperback
I have read many books about Wicca, many by the famous Wiccan authors and have always wanted to know how it all began and how Witches have been so wrongly portrayed throughout history. This book tells you just that. It is well written, starting with "how it all began" and progressing all the way through to the modern day, punctuated with some wonderful images, consisting of paintings and pictures throughout history which only add substance to the text. Overall I learnt a great deal and anyone wanting to know the real origin as far as the "history books" are concerned will be extremely pleased that they bought this book. Factual and informative, as you would expect from the British Museum Press.
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3 of 4 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover
For a hardback lavishly illustrated book I was very surprised at the excellent price. I expected high quality from this publisher and to all intents and purposes this book provided it, or so I thought. I enjoyed four of the long chapters although I did chringe at some of the more appalling 'american' terms used within the book, they really irritated me and made it seem almost immature. The chapters, Secrets of a Shapeshifter, Conjuring a Nightmare, Old Wives Tales and Romancing the Witch often gave different outlooks and opinions on the causes and problems of the ideas and trials of a witch even though this is clearly written from a feminist point of view it was still interesting. The book is brightly coloured through out, illustrations are of woodcuts, paintings, pictures, photographs and are nicely presented and printed with clarity unlike some books. I found it to be informative, and will use some of the stories mentioned to look into other areas and cases of witch trials although some of the interpretations I found to be unusual.

I was finding the book to be fairly good right until I got to to the last chapter being number five, which was called Lifting the Curse which was when it all fell apart. I was aware that the author was American, I was not aware however that she would use the American interpretation of 'wicca' to mean all witchcraft of today, in particular she believes that is a predominantly female movement, and her biggest mistake from which I am still reeling is that in this section that purports to be about Wicca today, has no mention of Gerald Gardner whatsoever. The father of Wicca is not mentioned which I find astounding. The mother of modern witchcraft (which in this book means wicca) is mentioned and she is apparantly is Starhawk, a woman who was born the year the witchcraft laws were repealed in the UK, and was still in nappies when Gerald Gardner and Doreen Valiente were writing and working their magic in this land. The author's idea of wicca today does not reflect true Wicca (regardless of whether you believe it should be coven based or self iniaited) but the American version where anything goes and those who fought the battle for the freedom of the laws and modern witchcraft are ignored. I really expected better of this highly respected publisher than to print a book that is so dreadfully and terribly misleading about Wicca.

I certainly don't recommend this book from a scoharly point of view, the basics are there, but after such an ending I have little faith in the authors ability to tell fact from fiction. But I am holding onto this book, the woodcut and illustrations are excellent and are its saving grace. It will do as a starter point to research other cases mentioned which is something i like to do. But this was a book about witches through the centuries, their perscution and their battles, their changing image and perceptions of them through the centuries right up to todays modern witch and that todays witchcraft is now called wicca. The latter being something I vementently dispute.

The bibliography seems long for someone who never refered to a Valiente, Gardner, Sanders, Farrar, Cochrane or even Fortune or Crowley book for early and mid 20th century occult and witchcraft work, but did however refer to three books by Starhawk for her research. When the modern day witchcraft chapter is so poorly researched it brings into question the validity of the the information given in the previous sections for the early history of witchcraft.

Still I'm holding onto this book, I like the illustrations.
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Amazon.com:  5 reviews
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful
A Feminist View of Witches 23 Nov 2000
By R. Hardy - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
Candace Savage's succinct history of witches, _Witch: The Wild Ride from Wicked to Wicca_ shows a real enthusiasm for her subject. It is also a fine history of how curiously people have behaved when confronting the supposed supernatural, and how fashions can change our view of history. Savage shows that black magic was for millennia subject to legal prosecution, but that the medieval church wasn't particularly worried about black magic or the women who supposedly practiced it. Priests who heard reports from women who said they had flown during the night and taken part in satanic rituals were encouraged to maintain disbelief. Reasonable men were not to take such things seriously. One priest of the time wrote of such dreams, "Who is imbecile enough to imagine that such things, seen only in the mind, have a bodily reality?" The church itself lapsed in its wise toleration when it opposed a couple of dissident sects in France around 1400. The sects allowed women to administer baptisms and so on, so in prosecution, the church tortured them until it got confessions of copulating with the devil, riding broomsticks, and eating infants. Witches were seen everywhere if something bad happened; they sowed disease and discord; they were the Devil in female shapes; they were Public Enemy Number One.

Against the wishes of many Bible believers, the image of the witch was changed during the enlightenment from a vicious devil-worshiper to a foolish little old lady. Still later they became the subjects of children's literature and cautionary lessons about what roles women really should fulfill. Finally, through the faulty scholarship of one Margaret Murray they were erroneously revealed as priestesses practicing an age-old pagan cult and proudly defying the Christian church. Scholars agree there was no such organized religion practiced by witches, but of course that doesn't matter. Savage shows in this profusely illustrated book that whether we need a scapegoat on whom to blame barrenness, a negative role model with which to warn our children, or a high priestess of cultural renewal, the image of the witch will always be there to scare or inspire, reinforcing the regrettable idea that there is something anomalous, something otherworldly, something not quite human, about a powerful woman.

6 of 7 people found the following review helpful
Not what I expected, but worth the read. 25 Oct 2000
By Jeremiah Wolfe - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
When I picked up this book I was expecting a history of witchcraft from an occult prospective. I was not expecting an examination of the Archetypal female witch through history from a feminist point of view. Despite my wrong expectations, I found this book to be extremely fascinating. The author follows the evolution of society's perception of the witch and how these perceptions helped to shape the roles of women. The material is presented is well written and insightful. The author's conversational style of writing draws the reader in, as she guides us through this sometimes-gruesome sometimes-funny history. While it is too short to a "definitive work," it does present all the information someone with a casual interest would want. Overall I thoroughly enjoyed this work and recommend it.
7 of 9 people found the following review helpful
Dead right..... 21 July 2001
By Dianne Foster - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
The cover of WITCH by Candace Savage depicts a motly assortment of characters terrorizing a frightened youth. The scene is a reproduction of "The Spell" by Goya, who painted it in 1797 at the height of the witch craze. The picture shows a conjurer in a yellow robe bending over a youth in white. A group of old hags in the background (presumeably witches) are dressed in black. Icons in the painting include the traditional witch imagery of owl-light, bat-wing, and mangled bablies.

WITCH is an extremely well-written and concise account of the "witch" story in the west. To label the book as a "feminist" tract is misleading, and a not so subtle manner of saying it is second-rate. WITCH provides the lay person with a solidly written and historically researched account. Many longer and more scholarly accounts by male historians tell the same tale in much more detail. WITCH is not propaganda, nor is it biased by a political agenda. The book is written for the layperson who does not wish to wade through the thousands of tomes written on this subject. Savage provides a nice bibliography if you wish to know more. She has sourced and cited her study from beginning to end. One drawback is that her work is based on secondary research, so if a primary source has an error she repeats it--but she cites the source so you can go to the original if you have a question.

WITCH is an art book filled with beautiful drawings, paintings and depictions of witches and their trials and tribulations over the past 500 years. A picture is worth a thousand words.

Other societies had/have witches, but the witch in the West is a direct out-growth of an amalgam of beliefs associated with the Bible. One of the most important points Savage makes is that the "witch craze" did not take place in the Middle Ages as most believe. The persecution of witches by the Roman Catholic Church was incidental. The Church was after heretics--such as the Cathars and Waldensians. Think of it as bringing in Al Capone for tax evasion. Witchcraft was a means to an end. The fact that the accused eschewed orthodoxy was the real issue.

Savage says, "The Reformation began as a movement to cleanse the church of "pagan" superstition. Christianity had been corrupted by Satan, the Protestants said, and they found his mark even on the Mass..." Savage reiterates what many historians point out...the worst persecutions of "witches" took place after the Protestant Reformation, and in predominantly Protestant countries. One-half of all the people executed for witchcraft died in Protestant Germany. Scotland, Sweden, and Switzerland were dangerous places for old ladies with no friends. The night Shakespeare's play "MacBeth" opened in England, and three witches stirred their cauldron on stage, people were being burned and hung for witchcraft all over Europe.

When the average person pictures a witch s/he visualizes a woman with a pale skin wearing a tall hat and flowing black cape--the typical dress of the 16th Century Puritan. In his painting "The Fight Between Carnival versus Lent" painted at the height of the Reformation, Brueghel depicts a "mock" battle in the foreground with colorfully arrayed miscreants ready for sin while the forces of repression dressed in black flood into the background.

Savage covers the story of witches into the 19th and 20th centuries, where behaviour once categorized as evil became "sick" or demented. Freud and his friends soon determined that much of the "hysteria" of the witch craze was a form of projection.

By the 20th Century, new targets of victimizaton were at hand in the form of Communists and others deemed "evil" by the established forces and folks lost interest in witches. Savage does not explore these other "witch hunts" but rather continues her tale with an overview of modern Wicca. This book is short and to the point and a good synopsis for anyone who wants a brief overview and a lovely work of art.

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