ABSTRACT

Embracing the Witch and the Goddess is a detailed survey of present-day feminist witches in New Zealand. It examines the attraction of witchcraft for its practitioners, and explores witches' rituals, views and beliefs about how magic works. The book provides a detailed portrait of an undocumented section of the growing neo-pagan movement, and compares the special character of New Zealand witchcraft with its counterparts in the United States, Great Britain, and Australia.
Kathryn Rountree traces the emergence and history of feminist witchcraft, and links witchcraft with the contemporary Goddess movement. She reviews scholarly approaches on the study of witchcraft and deals with the key debates which have engaged the movement's adherents and their critics, and ultimately presents what Mary Daly declared was missing from most historical and anthropological research on witchcraft: a 'Hag-identified vision'.
Based on fieldwork amongst witch practitioners, Embracing the Witch and the Goddess is an important contribution to the emerging profile of present-day witchcraft and paganism.

chapter 1|12 pages

INTRODUCTION

chapter 2|20 pages

APPROACHES TO WITCHCRAFT

chapter 3|17 pages

FEMINISTS AND WITCHES

chapter 4|21 pages

FEMINISTS AND THE GODDESS

chapter 5|14 pages

Researching witches: becoming enchanted

chapter 7|20 pages

THE ATTRACTION OF WITCHCRAFT

chapter 9|21 pages

WHAT WITCHES DO

chapter 10|11 pages

RITUAL AS ARTEFACT

chapter 11|15 pages

HOW MAGIC WORKS

chapter 12|10 pages

RE-MEMBERING THE WITCH AND THE GODDESS