Offshoring the invisible world? American ghosts, witches, and demons in the early enlightenment

The fierce debate about the reality of spirits and the “Invisible World” which flared up in the 1690’s helped define the early Enlightenment. All sides in this debate—from Spinoza and Balthasar Bekker to John Beaumont and Cotton Mather—refashioned familiar metaphors of light and darkness and connect...

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主要作者: Koslofsky, Craig 1963- (Author)
格式: 電子 Article
語言:English
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出版: Sage 2021
In: Critical research on religion
Year: 2021, 卷: 9, 發布: 2, Pages: 126-141
Standardized Subjects / Keyword chains:B Mather, Cotton 1663-1728 / Spinoza, Benedictus de 1632-1677 / Bekker, Balthasar 1634-1698 / 啟蒙時代 / 幽靈 / 女巫 / 邪靈 / 存在 / 爭論
B Westliche Welt / 啟蒙時代 / 明亮 / 幽靈 / 邪靈 / 女巫 / 黑暗 / 異教 / 非歐洲文化 / Dunkle Haut
IxTheo Classification:AB Philosophy of religion; criticism of religion; atheism
AG Religious life; material religion
KBQ North America
Further subjects:B Balthasar Bekker
B Light
B European enlightenment
B Cotton Mather
B ghosts and spirits
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實物特徵
總結:The fierce debate about the reality of spirits and the “Invisible World” which flared up in the 1690’s helped define the early Enlightenment. All sides in this debate—from Spinoza and Balthasar Bekker to John Beaumont and Cotton Mather—refashioned familiar metaphors of light and darkness and connected them with the world beyond Europe in surprising new ways. This article shows how this key controversy of the early Enlightenment was built upon references to darkness, light, and the benighted pagan peoples of the world. As new street lighting and improved domestic lighting nocturnalized daily life in the Netherlands, London, and Paris, the old denizens of the night - ghosts, spirits, and witches—were increasingly relegated to the extra-European world and used to articulate new categories of human difference based on civility, reason, and skin color. These new categories of human difference—new ways of seeing and ordering the world—were essential to the formation of early modern whiteness and the Enlightenment.
ISSN:2050-3040
Contains:Enthalten in: Critical research on religion
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.1177/2050303220986971