Literarisches Hexenwesen zur Zeit der Verfolgungen und Prozesse
摘要
According to common scholarly opinion, witchcraft and witches rarely appear in 16th- and 17th-century German literature. This paper proposes a reassessment of this view on witchcraft as a literary topic. I argue that the cumulative concept of witchcraft, which has shaped the understanding of the crimen magiae since the 15th century, had a centralizing effect on the field of literature: Around the turn of the 16th century, various themes and characters of biblical, pagan-antique or medieval origin, which had already been associated with magic, become aligned with the new concept, as Mathias Holtzwart’s biblical drama Saul (1571) exemplifies. A second case study on Philander infernalis (1648), which so far has received little scholarly attention, examines literary representations of 17th-century persecution practices. This unauthorized continuation of Moscherosch’s Gesichte Philanders von Sittewald combines legal case histories of witches and sorcerers with a voyage to their infernal places of punishment. Philander infernalis raises the question how literary imagination and the imaginary of law interact in the context of witchcraft. The conclusion identifies desiderata and suggests perspectives for an exploration of witchcraft in literature beyond demonology.