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A Cultural History of Magic in the Age of Enlightenment: The Cultural History Series.

Research output: Book/ReportBookpeer-review

Abstract

This volume, written by leading experts, explores magic in its many forms in the long eighteenth century (c.1660 and c.1830): from harmful (witchcraft, cursing, and the evil-eye) and ceremonial/ritual magic to astrology, alchemy, magical healing, protective magic and divination. It examines how and why magic retained cultural currency in a period of intense change, its gendering in a male dominated society, and its regulation by religious and legal authorities. The book also discusses magical creatures, objects and techniques, how magic was represented in literature and the visual arts, and what happened to it when exported to new lands with colonisation. Although the era covered encapsulates Enlightenment and Romanticism it has often been dismissed as a self-explanatory interlude that bridged the ‘enchanted’ early modern period, when witch trials raged and religious authorities targeted ‘beneficial’ magical practitioners, and a ‘disenchanted’ modernity marked by urbanisation, secularisation, industrialisation, the rise of modern science and medicine and the decline of magic. What emerges from this book is a more complex and nuanced picture that encourages us to challenge any neat categorisation of magical use and practice which was often dependant on context for its meaning. Rather than one of disenchantment and decline, magic is very much alive in the enlightenment period, waxing or waning depending on the country, culture, social class, region, place, or time looked at; always adapting, always changing, always there.

Dr Andrew Sneddon is senior lecturer in history at Ulster University and joint editor of Irish Historical Studies. He is a leading exponent of digital and creative public history and has published widely on the history witchcraft and magic, from the late medieval era to the modern period.
Original languageEnglish
Place of PublicationLondon
PublisherBloomsbury Academic
Number of pages250
Volume4
Edition1st
ISBN (Print)9781350124073
Publication statusPublished (in print/issue) - 18 Sept 2025

Keywords

  • Magic
  • Eighteenth century
  • Europe
  • Witchcraft
  • History
  • Enlightenment

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  • Imagining Magic

    Sneddon, A., 18 Sept 2025, Andrew Sneddon (ed.), A Cultural History of Magic in the Age of Enlightenment.: The Cultural History Series. . 1st ed. London: Bloomsbury Academic, Vol. 4. p. 179-206 27 p. 9

    Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapterpeer-review

  • ‘Introduction’

    Sneddon, A., 18 Sept 2025, Andrew Sneddon (ed.), A Cultural History of Magic in the Age of Enlightenment. : The Cultural History Series. . 1st ed. London: Bloomsbury Academic, Vol. 4. p. 1-14 14 p. 1

    Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapterpeer-review

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