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The Witch and the Hysteric: The Monstrous Medieval in Benjamin Christensen's Häxan Alexander Doty and Patricia Claire Ingham.

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Doty, Alexander, author.
Ingham, Patricia Clare, 1958- author.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Civilization, Medieval--Psychological aspects.
Civilization, Medieval.
Hysteria in motion pictures.
Motion pictures--Denmark.
Motion pictures.
Witchcraft--Europe--History.
Witchcraft.
Witches in motion pictures.
Häxan (Motion picture).
Christensen, Benjamin, 1879-1959--Criticism and interpretation.
Genre:
Electronic books.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (68 pages) : illustrations; PDF, digital file(s).
Place of Publication:
Brooklyn, NY punctum books 2014
Baltimore, Maryland : Project Muse, 2020
Language Note:
English
System Details:
text file
Summary:
Benjamin Christensen's 1922 Swedish/Danish film Häxan (known under its English title as Witchcraft Through the Ages) has entranced, entertained, shocked, and puzzled audiences for nearly a century. The film mixes documentary with fantasy, history with theatrics, religion and science, the medieval past and modern culture. This uncanny content is compounded by the film's formal strangeness, a mixture of quasi-documentary with fictional episodes, illustrated lectures alongside docudrama recreations and dreamscapes. Is this a documentary, a horror flick, or both? In this chapbook, authors Doty and Ingham argue that the puzzle of Christensen's Häxan might be unraveled by attending to the film's provocative and paradoxical medievalism, its fantasmatic rendering of the witch as a medieval monster. Such monstrous medievalism, moreover, sheds considerable light on the politics of gender and culture once the witch is rendered a female figure in a time-out-of-joint.
Contents:
Seasons of the witch
Maleficia and belief
Testimony troubles
Witch, past and future : the politics of retroactive diagnosis
Documenting the fantastic
Conclusion : medieval monsters don't let go.
Notes:
Includes bibliographical references (pages 63-68).
Description based on print version record.
OCLC:
1178720840

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