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Ecstasies (book) : ウィキペディア英語版
Ecstasies (book)

''Ecstasies: Deciphering the Witches' Sabbath'' is a study of visionary traditions in Early Modern Europe written by the Italian historian Carlo Ginzburg. First published by Giulio Einaudi in 1989 under the Italian title ''Storia notturna: Una decifrazione del Sabba'', it was later translated into English by Raymond Rosenthal and published by Hutchinson Radius in 1990.
''Ecstasies'' builds on the theories put forward in Ginzburg's 1966 book ''The Night Battles'', in which he studied the ''benandanti'', a visionary folk tradition found in the north-eastern Italian province of Friuli during the 16th century.
==Reception==
In his study of contemporary Pagan Witchcraft, ''The Triumph of the Moon'' (1999), the English historian Ronald Hutton (1953–) of the University of Bristol noted that ''Ecstasies'' was "something which probably nobody else could have written, and which broke important new ground." Nonetheless, he felt that it had "the faults common to such bold and broad-brush enterprises, of covering too much too fast, and with too much dependence upon the author's original, narrower body of expertise; in this case, his impressions of tribal shamanism and ancient paganism were both somewhat sketchy, and arguably too much was extrapolated from the very unusual phenomenon of the ''benandanti'' of Friuli, his first study."〔Hutton 1999. p. 378.〕
Hutton proceeded to note that Ginzburg's work in ''Ecstasies'' represented "an extensive and fruitful development" of the idea that "underlying the early modern stereotype of satanic witchcraft lay not merely intellectual constructs but a network of ancient popular beliefs regarding night-flying spirits and goddesses, with their retinues." He asserted that in this manner, ''Ecstasies'' built on the work of the historian Norman Cohn (1915–2007) in his book ''Europe's Inner Demons'' (1975).〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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