'The binding theme of this collection is the need to study these beliefs by understanding the thought-worlds of those who held them at the time, and to appreciate how complex, and often mutually adversarial, those thought-worlds were. This makes an outright rejection of the dominant tendency in scholarship of the subject for most of the twentieth century, which was to impose external analyses upon the phenomenon, and to ignore the views of those involved in it on the grounds that they were deluded ... Because the team of experts is international, the case-studies concerned extend to Germany and Spain as well as providing a range of British material. The total effect is to move the subject on rather than merely enlarging our knowledge of it.' - Ronald Hutton, University of Bristol 'Besides academics and undergraduates interested in the history of early modern witchcraft, the book would be of particular interest to students of literature, cultural studies and criminology (particularly as a number of essays are concerned with reading and understanding judicial texts). The book breaks new ground by focusing on 'cultural' issues such as the language, texts and idioms of early modern witchcraft and poses exciting questions about how we should understand this complex 'alien' subject. Consequently, the book should be in demand for quite some time and will quickly become required reading for all who wish to keep abreast of intellectual developments in witchcraft research. I would certainly recommend it to my students.' - Robert Walinski-Kiehl, University of Portsmouth 'This is an excellent collection of essays which will be very useful, not only for specialist courses on witchcraft but also for other courses in the social, cultural and gender history of early modern Europe.' - Alison Rowlands, Essex University 'This is on balance a well-presented and coordinated set of essays.' - Sixteenth Century Journal