The Wonders Of The Invisible World Summary

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Written in the late 17th century, “The Wonders of the Invisible World” by Cotton Mather is a timeless work in which he wrote against the presumed witchcraft that was taking place at Salem, Massachusetts. At the time, descendants of the puritans that arrived with the Massachusetts Bay Colony believed that Satan was real and he wandered this earth; therefore, the supernatural was part of everyday life. Prominent puritans believed God was the only thing protecting them. Puritans ascribed their losses and misfortune to external forces conspiring against them. It was only after the Salem witch trials began that the institution of religion and spectral evidence in the court system and government would begin to be dismantled. While there were a multitude …show more content…

Much of the story of Adam and Eve can be explained within biblical context, and its male supremacy bias confirms to be of historical origin rather than divine; however it is perceived as comprising the “fundamental,” and essentially destructive "truths" about the nature of women. Eve has represented the fundamental character and identity of all women. No, there haven’t been other women with redeemable qualities to represent them throughout history. Even those as great as Cleopatra have not earned the title as extraordinary woman in the history books, because her dominance over men was perceived as unbecoming and disgraceful. However, Eve’s image is what has represented women. Through her words and actions, the true nature of women was exposed; her story and “weakness” showcases what women’s innate nature corresponds to. Eve represents everything about a woman a man should guard against; she is the original sinner, and cannot be trusted in both form and symbol. The idea that her actions are not without warrant, and therefore she is a representation of us is, in fact, what has been propagated throughout hundreds of years. Eve is woman, and because of her, all women are by nature disobedient, prone to temptation, weak-willed. The connotations associated with womanhood, in turned have become, untrustworthy, deceitful, …show more content…

Here they confessed Carriers ability to bewitch them and to cause them physical pain and suffering by just looking at them. Carrier was also accused of using her children and family to haunt others; their images appeared in incredibly odd ways, either from ergot induced hallucinations or, much like vogue magazine, their own mental psyches recreating a fictional story that would fit in with their idealistic society. What better way to believe that god is real and the devil is dwelling on this land recruiting weak and sinful women to become part of his minion group than to actually have the physical manifestations of this in their lives? Ruled by terror and mischief, the courts ruled and condemned the hanging of these women and some men, further perpetuating the misogyny and male supremacy in

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