La puissance des mots – “Virtus verborum”: Débats doctrinaux sur le pouvoir des incantations au Moyen Âge (review)

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2010-07-01
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Bailey, Michael
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Bailey, Michael
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History
The Department of History seeks to provide students with a knowledge of historical themes and events, an understanding of past cultures and social organizations, and also knowledge of how the past pertains to the present.

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The Department of History was formed in 1969 from the division of the Department of History, Government, and Philosophy.

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For all that magicians sometimes employed signs, symbols, gestures, stones, or herbs, spoken spells still comprise the most pervasive magical device in Western culture. The very ubiquity of verbal formulas in many forms of magical operation make words a difficult subject for scholars to grasp. In this impressive study, Béatrice Delaurenti takes a carefully limited approach. As her subtitle indicates, she examines intellectual debates about the power of words in the Middle Ages. In fact, she focuses on a period of intense debate that lasted, in her analysis, from around 1230 to around 1370. These dates mark important "parentheses," as she will ultimately term them in her conclusion, that bracket an era in which some authorities gave serious consideration to the potential natural power contained in incantations.

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This is a book review from Magic, Ritual, and Witchcraft 5 (2010): 124, doi:10.1353/mrw.0.0174. Posted with permission.

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Fri Jan 01 00:00:00 UTC 2010
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