SALEM VILLAGE WITCHCRAFT (1692-1693)
Events
Accusations
by daughter and niece of minister Parris,
against
Sarah Good, Sarah Osbourne, & Tituba
Court
of Oyer and Terminer: specially appointed court
June-Sept
1692: 200 accused, 3/4 women; 19 hanged
Oct
1692--court dissolved; May 1693--others released
Institutional
weaknesses
1684--Massachusetts Charter expires; direct royal govt
1680's French
and Indian attacks: fear, scapegoating
Salem
Village vs. Salem Town
Conflict over village autonomy-church, government
Factional
disputes: minister as focus
Putnams vs. Porters; role of Samuel Parris
Intellectual
background
Puritan concept of community, "covenant"
Possession
as diagnosis: Boston--Goodwin case
1687 Cotton
Mather, Boston Puritan theologian
Memorable
Providences Relating to W/C & Possession
The
Accused
Deviants: Sarah Good, Bridget Bishop
Accusations
move up social ladder:
church
members: Martha Corey and Rebecca Nurse
Accusers:
"the afflicted girls"
"Sympathetic hysteria": act as a group
Generational
conflict:
young
women (12 - 20yrs) accuse older women
Factional
conflict: Putnams versus Porters
see
Boyer & Nissenbaum, Salem Possessed
Spectral
evidence as judicial issue
(spectres or "ghosts" emanating from witch))
Warning by
Cotton Mather to Judge Richards:
possible
demonic impersonation of innocent people
Opposition
by Robert Pike, magistrate and
Thomas
Brattle, merchant: argue for possession
Increase
Mather: Boston 1693 Cases of Conscience
Concerning
Evil Spirits Impersonating Men
argues
against use of spectral evidence
Interpretations of the Salem Trials
Medical
and biological explanations
Hysteria: Caulfield, 1943 (physician)
Mental
disorder of religious origin
Ergotism:
Caporael 1976 (biologist)
rye
fungus poisoning as cause of convulsions
critique
of theory: Spanos & Gottlieb
no Vitamin A deficiencies
no
young children, missing symptoms
Tertiary
syphilis: insanity, insensitive spots
Cultural
/ Historical Explanations
reject
mono-causal, reductive theories; stress
plurality
of factors, complexity of cultural causation
Social-economic
tensions, factions (Putnams/Porters)
Boyer
& Nissenbaum, Salem Possessed
Why
women? Carol Karlsen, Devil in Shape of Woman
l)
"handmaidens" either "of the Lord" or "of Satan"
2)
theme of "anomalous property inheritance":
witchcraft accusations directed against
recent widows without brothers or sons
fear
of property leaving male control