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Witch-Children: From Salem Witch-Hunts to Modern Courtrooms
 
 
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Witch-Children: From Salem Witch-Hunts to Modern Courtrooms [Hardcover]

Hans Sebald (Author)
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)

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Book Description

March 1995
The period of persecution and execution of so-called witches stands as a venomous chapter of Western civilisation. The participation of small children and adolescents, whether as the accused or as the accusers, was pivotal. It linked the power of the inquisitor to the fates of many unsuspecting men and women - people who often became hapless victims, devoured by a ravenous inquisition that stretched across two continents.Dr Hans Sebald maintains that the classic "Salem syndrome" is anything but past history; it is frequently re-enacted in the modern courtroom. We observe children as they accuse others of molesting or seducing them within a public mind-set that is predisposed to believe them. Why would they lie? A mythomaniacal child - one who has not yet fully recognised the contours of reality - is in a position to wreak havoc on the lives of innocent persons. And it matters little whether the authorities are judges, juries, inquisitors of centuries past, or counsellors and therapists of more recent vintage.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

"This book is fascinating and, in its own way, frightening. This sober appraisal should be required reading for professionals and lay persons seeking to be informed." -- Child & Family Behavior Therapy "The unique aspect of this book is the emphasis on describing and understanding the role children played in witch-hunts... a fascinating account ..." -- Issues in Child Abuse Accusations

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 258 pages
  • Publisher: Prometheus Books (March 1995)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0879759658
  • ISBN-13: 978-0879759650
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6.3 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.2 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,466,067 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
3.8 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Well done -- children can be victimizers!, April 6, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: Witch-Children: From Salem Witch-Hunts to Modern Courtrooms (Hardcover)
The author's term "witch-children" is most insightfuland applicable to situations where children are under pressure andinterrogation. The book deals with the mindset of children who accuse adults of wrong-doings and how such children sense what the interrogator (once inquisitor; now lawyer, counselor, therapist) wants to hear. Leading questions encourage descriptions of adults' criminal acts that, in reality, don't exist. The book starts with examples from the time of the witch persecution (American as well as European) when children's accusations were taken as facts and led to severe punishment, including being burned alive. A latter part of the book deals with the psychological dynamics of children seeking revenge or aggrandizement by playing important and powerful roles in our modern life. It shows how the atmosphere of the modern courtroom resembles the old witch-hunt and how innocent people can be punished on the basis of children's fanciful denunciations - including accusations of sexual molestation, satanism, and even still witchcraft. There are two things that may disturb some readers. One is the author's prejudice when he blames religious beliefs for much of the historical persecutions. The other is his portrayal of children which strays far from our culture's stereotype of the innocent child. Nonetheless, I think this book is a worthwhile read -- interesting, insightful and of great value to counselors, therapists, teachers, and parents. END
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A devil's playground, December 13, 2006
This review is from: Witch-Children: From Salem Witch-Hunts to Modern Courtrooms (Hardcover)
In 1995, the year "Witch-Children" was published, a New Mexican father decided his sons were possessed by the devil and chopped off the head of his 14-year-old. We can assume he was deranged, either by an organic brain defect or injury or by chemicals, but the form his madness took was not internal and original.
He learned it. His teachers deserve a big share of the blame for this atrocity. We have such teachers all around us, still in the 21st century, and they remain dangerous, although not as dangerous as when they controlled the civil and religious judicial power, as Hans Sebald relates in his sickening book.
"The classical Salem syndrome is anything but past history," Sebald writes. "It is . . . frequently re-enacted in the modern courtroom as a time-honored tradition."
But Sebald's analysis is more than just an attack on atrocities committed in the name of Christianity (and equally common in non-Christian religions, although his history does not extend that far). A retired professor of sociology at Arizona State, Sebald asks how it comes about that children are demonized.
And he points out that in the demonological system, children become persecutors as well as persecuted. We see it in the hysteria about child sexual abuse, which has resulted in such horrors as the McMartin preschool case.
"Questioning children's innocence is not popular," Sebald says, and before the secularization of government it was often suicidal, but he shows how in fact a belief in Satanism permits the powerless to manipulate others, including their parents, even unto death.
Sebald's prize case is Witch-boy, whose real name and fate are unknown, though his fate is easily guessed. Sebald brings a unique background to the history, as an American academic born in Franconia, Germany, which at one period was probably the worst place in Europe for the judicial murder of witches.
Sebald was able to read the 1629 court records (in a local dialect practically inaccessible to non-Franconians) of Witch-boy's statement. It was taken as a confession, but as Sebald shows, Witch-boy did not simply confess under torture. He manipulated the system, he fantasized, lied, accused, broke down and recovered, taunted.
He was a feisty delinquent caught up in a horrible system created by maniacs, and he caused the deaths of many innocent people.
"Witch-Children" makes grim reading. "It seems that children's activities, especially in peer context, form a constant throughout history," Sebald says. "Their playing, roaming, exploring, bravado, pranks and delinquent behavior have changed little over the ages. The major changes have been in the way people view and interpret their activities."
Once interpreted as influenced by Satan, "today the scientifically-minded would interpret the same behavior within a social-psychological framework."
Some of us would. Too few. This book is enough to scare any rational parent.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Casting a Chilling Light Upon the Witch Craze, June 6, 2010
This review is from: Witch-Children: From Salem Witch-Hunts to Modern Courtrooms (Hardcover)
"Witch-Children," despite its somewhat lurid title and and eerie cover artwork, is actually a sobering and well-thought out exploration of the European Witch Craze by the late Hans Sebald. Dr. Sebald focuses on an aspect of the Witch Craze that is usually ignored - the role of children as both accuser and as the accused. Sebald draws upon developmental psychology, eyewitness testimony, memory research,and cultural anthropology to create a compelling case against childhood "innocence" and warning against taking children's testimony at face value. To me, at least, this is a chilling read with many ramifications.

Dr. Sebald wrote "Witch-Children" in a very "European" style, meaning that he prefered in-depth qualitative analysis to the sort of empericism that American readers expect from even a popular science treatise. In this instance, nearly a third of the book is devoted to a case study of a child Sebald dubs "Witchboy." While Witchboy himself does not exactly seem that gripping a figure, his case serves as an exemplar of sorts, and helps to illustrate many of Dr. Sebald's points. Witchboy was almost certainly an exceptionally imaginative boy, if the transcripted interviews Dr. Sebald provides are any indication.

The book's flaws seem to be the effect of marketing. Despite the subtitle, precious little regarding the Salem Witch Trials appears in this book. (In fact, for most of the space Sebald devotes to Salem, he points out the ways in which Salem is actually atypical for the witchcraft accusations particularly as they existed in Europe). The rear of the bookjacket also implies a juicier read. This is really a well-written book that will appeal to those with academic interests, but it will cause you to rethink much of what you know about children, and leave you somewhat pessimistic regarding the chances of something similar to the Witch Craze happening again.



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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
This book is about a venomous chapter of Western civilization: the persecution of witches. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
New York, Mother Samuel, Hans Sebald, Hartwig Weber, Johann Georg, Wolfgang Behringer, Erik Midelfort, Geschichte des Bisthums Bamberg, Carlo Ginzburg, Holy Roman Empire, John Doris, John Tedeschi, Old Demdike, Southwestern Germany, Herbert Pohl, Malleus Maleficarum, Charles Mackay, Constitutio Criminalis Carolina, Geschichtliche Landeskunde, Johann Looshorn, Mother Dickinson, Oxford University Press, Santa Claus, Six Years of Trial, Veiled Women
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