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Witching Culture: Folklore and Neo-Paganism in America (Contemporary Ethnography) |
List Price: $19.95
Your Price: $19.95 |
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Product Info |
Reviews |
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Rating: Summary: *Must Have, Double Bag!* Review: *Must Have, Double Bag!* is old school comic fandom's term for things that a fan _cannot_ live without--and have any fanboy or fangirl cred in the eyes of her or his fan peers.
And a perfect, to-the-point description of this book.
Written by a Gardnerian and Reclaiming practitioner who also happens to be a skillful folklorist and anthropologist, Magliocco is presently an assistant professor at California State University, Northridge.
Witching Culture is thoughtful, insightful, fruitful, grounded, and, maybe, provocative.
Witching Culture is well-crafted and a joy to read.
Witching Culture is one of the best ethnographies that I've read in a long time.
Magliocco manages to accentuate the participation in her participant-observations, but sustain a vibrant and keen postmodern theoretical analysis at the same time. She takes the reader *there* to a living experience of an alternative culture.
She addresses a broad range of topics shaping and challenging Neo-Paganism,especially Craft in the San Francisco Bay Area, from how magic is envisioned as a working relationship with world and deities to ritual art and artistry to Neo-Pagan shopping habits to identity construction and cultural borrowing, and more.
Like the Neo-Pagan bricoleurs she discusses, she takes advantage of theories and insights borrowed from a number of disciplines and discourses, putting the mix to good, understanding use.
Magliocco considers Neo-Pagan culture to be oppositional to dominant culture, postmodern in its world view at a time when the dominant modern culture offers little beyond materiality, consumerism, alienation, oppression, and spiritual--
if not economic--impoverishment. She traces some roots of this oppositionality to sources in the Romantic and European nationalist movements. And provides a good account of Neo-Paganism's cultural creativity in shaping magical ritual, even
political action, from these sources, among others.
Her approach to the creative and enculturating role that song plays in today's Neo-Paganism alone makes the book worthwhile.
Witching Culture is a *Must Have, Double Bag!* book that all of us should be proud to add to our libraries.
Note: I am Sabina's friend, and the *Pitch* in the book. All I can assure you is--as an old-school comic guy--if the book sucked, I'd say so. Far from it--Witching Culture shines bright!
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