本帖最后由 choi 于 10-31-2017 12:12 编辑
In the title of the book review, "the wicked" and "fly" are the subject and verb, respectively.
Tom Shippey, The Wicked Fly at Night; From the early 15th century to the late 18th, some 40,000 to 60,000 people were put to death for witchcraft in Europe. Wall Street Journal, Oct 31, 2017
https://www.wsj.com/articles/rev ... at-night-1509402732
(book review on Ronald Hutton, The Witch; A history of fear, from ancient times to the present. Yale University Press, 2017)
Note: There is no need to read the rest.
(a) "With Halloween upon us, one can see them [witches] on every street, with a standard set of accessories: pointy hat, black cloak, broomstick, possibly a magic wand and hag mask. And all witches are female, we know. Harry Potter has a broomstick, but he's not a witch; he's a wizard."
(b) "What, though, is a witch? In his detailed study 'The Witch,' Ronald Hutton, a historian at the University of Bristol, gives the standard academic definition right away: 'someone who causes harm to others by mystical means.' He then notes immediately that this formulation will be rejected by at least three groups in modern society. First, those who believe that there are good witches as well, or as Mr Hutton call them, 'service magicians.' Granny Weatherwax and her colleagues in Terry Pratchett's 'Discworld' books are service magicians. They act as midwives, provide herbal medicine, and protect against supernatural intruders, elves, fairies and worse. [The other two groups are small in number and insignificant.]"
Terry Pratchett
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Terry_Pratchett
(c) "While belief in witches (as defined academically) is all but universal across the world, Mr Hutton observes, it's surprisingly variable. * * * Belief often remains strong to this day, with outbreaks of panic and repression in many places, notably South Africa and Central America. * * * The root cause of belief in witches may well be a reluctance to believe that misfortune just comes by chance. When something bad happens, someone must have done it, someone who can be blamed. This impulse gets worse in times of stress, but ut needs an element of prevbelief to focus on." |