Waking the witch Reflections on women, magic, and power

Pam Grossman

Book - 2019

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Subjects
Published
New York : Gallery Books 2019.
Language
English
Main Author
Pam Grossman (author)
Edition
First Gallery Books harcover edition
Physical Description
288 pages ; 22 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages [279]-281).
ISBN
9781982100704
  • The good, the bad, and the wicked
  • Teen witch: spell casts for outcasts
  • Sympathy for the she-devil
  • Body monsters
  • Gifted sisters & shady ladies
  • The dark arts: magic makers & craft women
  • Power in numbers: covens & collectives
  • Who is a witch?
Review by Booklist Review

Author Grossman weaves pop culture together with an age-old craft for a fun, informative glimpse of witchcraft. Readers learn interesting facts ranging from the history of Sabrina the Teen-Age Witch, who first appeared in 1962, to the intersection of art and witchcraft, to references to witchcraft in the style and themes of Lady Gaga and Beyoncé. Waking the Witch reflects Grossman's ability to cast her spell with memoir, storytelling, journalism, and history. She utilizes all of her experience, which include extensive publication in popular media, as well as other media formats (she has a popular podcast called The Witch Wave and she created WitchEmoji, an online sticker pack). She has a background lecturing on art and the occult, and is experienced in the business world with her corporate branding work. Feminists will appreciate Grossman's in-depth, woman-focused history and analysis. She observes ways women's history and contemporary reality are intertwined with references to witchcraft, the occult, myth, and a multitude of female archetypes. Waking the Witch is a must-add for public and academic collections.--Joyce McIntosh Copyright 2019 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Grossman (What Is A Witch), host of the Witch Wave podcast, analyzes archetypes, stereotypes, and characterizations of witches, real and fictional, before making the case that all women should embrace this "ultimate feminist icon" in her fun study. Grossman begins by debunking or contextualizing common beliefs about witches-such as that witches are mainly teenaged outcasts-before offering feminist analyses of an array of fictional characters, including the Wicked Witch of the West (here viewed as an independent woman in a male dominated world), and a superb section which explains the witchcraft throughout Sylvia Townsend Warner's 1926 feminist classic Lolly Willowes. Grossman then turns to real-world accounts of witches and their antagonists, among them Abigail Williams, who ignited the Salem witch trials, and failed 2010 Delaware senate candidate Christine O'Donnell, who was ridiculed for videos in which she admitted that she "dabbled in witchcraft." There are a few uneven memoir passages, in which Grossman writes of how she came to identify as a witch and practice witchcraft, as well as blunt political diatribes against Republicans, but these are less successful than her analyses. Nevertheless, feminist readers will be pleased by Grossman's deconstruction of witch clichés. (June) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Author (What Is a Witch?), podcast host (The Witch Wave) and practicing witch, Grossman delivers a series of meditations on the nature of women's power as seen through the lens of the imagery and reputation of witches over the centuries. It's a well-known story: the male dominated church and states perpetuated the fear of witches and their uncanny powers (supposedly often gained in an unholy alliance with the devil) to justify the persecution, objectification, and diminishment of women throughout history. But Grossman is not dependent on tropes, ultimately weaving a celebration of witches and everyday individuals whose independence and self-possession fuel their resistance and rebellion against the long-standing social contract of female disempowerment. A rich and unique mix of historical events, literary references, and contemporary popular media inform keen observations on how we have arrived at a place in which feminism and witchcraft find a cultural convergence. VERDICT Reminiscent of Sarah Vowell's work and equally affecting, this intellectually satisfying, personally liberating, and remarkably humorous classic is recommended for readers of women's history, paganism, witchcraft, and feminism.--Janet Tapper, Univ. of Western States Lib., Portland, OR

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Assorted musings from a modern witch.Witches are having a moment, and Grossman has played no small role in making this happen. A practicing witch herself, she is the founder of the Occult Humanities Conference at NYU, and she has been published in a variety of publications. Her personal Instagram account has 8,000 followers, and the account for her podcast, The Witch Wave, has nearly 14,000. One might expect her book to be an accessible guide to witchcraft and its most recent renaissance. It is not that, and, indeed, it's difficult to say what this book is or for whom it was written. The chapter called "Body Monsters" includes some intriguing observations about women and motherhood. However, in trying to establish a connection between historic and modern ideas about female sexuality and reproductive rights, Grossman includes much more detail about contemporary politics than is necessary to make her point. The extended exploration of witch-inspired fashion also feels like a bad fit for this section. The author's treatment of witches in recent pop culture is especially frustrating. It reads as if Grossman is unaware of the incredible wealth of materialfrom the scholarly essays to fan sitesdevoted to subjects like Sabrina Spellman and Buffy the Vampire Slayer's Willow Rosenberg. An author writing for a general audience can be forgiven for not taking a deep dive into the academic literature, but Grossman doesn't offer any insight into these characters that wouldn't be obvious to a casual viewer. Overall, the text feels more like notes toward a full-length study than a finished product, and the long passages of autobiographical material reinforce this sense. Most readers will come away from the book with an understanding of why it is so appealing to Grossman but little else.An odd, uneven mix of history, cultural criticism, and memoir. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Waking the Witch Introduction Witches have always walked among us, populating societies and storyscapes across the globe for thousands of years. From Circe to Hermione, from Morgan le Fay to Marie Laveau, the witch has long existed in the tales we tell about ladies with strange powers that can harm or heal. And although people of all genders have been considered witches, it is a word that is now usually associated with women. Throughout most of history, she has been someone to fear, an uncanny Other who threatens our safety or manipulates reality for her own mercurial purposes. She's a pariah, a persona non grata, a bogeywoman to defeat and discard. Though she has often been deemed a destructive entity, in actuality a witchy woman has historically been far more susceptible to attack than an inflictor of violence herself. As with other "terrifying" outsiders, she occupies a paradoxical role in cultural consciousness as both vicious aggressor and vulnerable prey. Over the past 150 years or so, however, the witch has done another magic trick, by turning from a fright into a figure of inspiration. She is now as likely to be the heroine of your favorite TV show as she is its villain. She might show up in the form of your Wiccan coworker, or the beloved musician who gives off a sorceress vibe in videos or onstage. There is also a chance that she is you, and that "witch" is an identity you have taken upon yourself for any number of reasons--heartfelt or flippant, public or private. Today, more women than ever are choosing the way of the witch, whether literally or symbolically. They're floating down catwalks and sidewalks in gauzy black clothing and adorning themselves with Pinterest-worthy pentagrams and crystals. They're filling up movie theaters to watch witchy films, and gathering in back rooms and backyards to do rituals, consult tarot cards, and set life-altering intentions. They're marching in the streets with HEX THE PATRIARCHY placards and casting spells each month to try to constrain the commander in chief. Year after year, articles keep proclaiming, "It's the Season of the Witch!" as journalists try to wrap their heads around the mushrooming witch "trend." And all of this begs the question: Why? Why do witches matter? Why are they seemingly everywhere right now? What, exactly, are they? (And why the hell won't they go away?) I get asked such things over and over, and you would think that after a lifetime of studying and writing about witches, as well as hosting a witch-themed podcast and being a practitioner of witchcraft myself, my answers would be succinct. In fact, I find that the more I work with the witch, the more complex she becomes. Hers is a slippery spirit: try to pin her down, and she'll only recede further into the deep, dark wood. I do know this for sure though: show me your witches, and I'll show you your feelings about women. The fact that the resurgence of feminism and the popularity of the witch are ascending at the same time is no coincidence: the two are reflections of each other. That said, this current Witch Wave is nothing new. I was a teen in the 1990s, the decade that brought us such pop-occulture as Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Charmed, and The Craft, not to mention riot grrrls and third-wave feminists who taught me that female power could come in a variety of colors and sexualities. I learned that women could lead a revolution while wearing lipstick and combat boots--and sometimes even a cloak. But my own witchly awakening came at an even earlier age. Morganville, New Jersey, where I was raised, was a solidly suburban town, but it retained enough natural land features back then to still feel a little bit scruffy in spots. We had a small patch of woods in our backyard that abutted a horse farm, and the two were separated by a wisp of running water that we could cross via a plank of wood. When we were little, my older sister, Emily, and I would sometimes venture to the other side, where we could feed the horses (an act that still scares me to this day) and pick fistfuls of clover. But the majority of our time was spent on our side of the stream, threading ourselves through the thicket of trees that served as our personal forest. In one corner of the yard, a giant puddle would form whenever it rained, surrounded by a border of ferns. We called this spot our Magical Place. That it would vanish and then reappear only added to its mystery. It was a portal to the unknown. These woods are where I first remember doing magic-- entering that state of deep play where imaginative action becomes reality. I would spend hours out there, creating rituals with rocks and sticks, drawing secret symbols in the dirt, losing all track of time. It was a space that felt holy and wild, yet still strangely safe. As we age, we're supposed to stop filling our heads with such "nonsense." Unicorns are to be traded in for Barbie dolls (though both are mythical creatures, to be sure). We lose our tooth fairies, walk away from our wizards. Dragons get slain on the altar of youth. Most kids grow out of their "magic phase." I grew further into mine. My grandma Trudy was a librarian at the West Long Branch Library, which meant I got to spend many an afternoon lurking between the 001.9 and 135 Dewey decimal-sections, reading about Bigfoot and dream interpretation and Nostradamus. I spent countless hours in my room, learning about witches and goddesses, and I loved anything by authors like George MacDonald, Roald Dahl, and Michael Ende--writers fluent in the language of enchantment. Books were my broomstick. They allowed me to fly to other realms where anything was possible. My very favorite book was Wise Child by Monica Furlong, a story about a young girl who gets taken in by Juniper, a kind and beautiful witch who lives at the top of a hill in the Scottish countryside. Juniper is feared by the local townsfolk because she doesn't practice their religion and because she is a woman who lives on her own. She teaches Wise Child the ways of natural medicine and magic, and shows her the kind of love that a mother might. The villagers come to them in secret whenever they are in need of healing, but in public, Juniper and Wise Child are shunned. Witches, I learned from the book, are complicated creatures, sources of great comfort and great terror. And no matter how good a witch might be, she would often become the target of misunderstanding at best and persecution at worst. The witch is always at risk. Nevertheless, she persists. Though fictional witches were my first guides, I soon discovered that magic was something real people could do. I started frequenting new age shops and experimenting with mass-market paperback spell books from the mall. I was raised Jewish but found myself attracted to belief systems that felt more individualized and mystical and that fully honored the feminine. Eventually I found my way to modern Paganism, a self-directed spiritual path that sustains me to this day. I'm not unique in this trajectory of pivoting away from organized religion and toward something more personal: as of September 2017, more than a quarter of US adults--27 percent--now say that they think of themselves as spiritual but not religious, according to Pew Research Center. Now, I identify both as a witch and with the archetype of the witch overall, and I use the term fluidly. At any given time, I might use the word witch to signify my spiritual beliefs, my supernatural interests, or my role as an unapologetically complex, dynamic female in a world that prefers its women to be smiling and still. I use it with equal parts sincerity and salt: with a bow to a rich and often painful history of worldwide witchcraft, and a wink to other members of our not-so-secret society of people who fight from the fringes for the liberty to be our weirdest and most wondrous selves. Magic is made in the margins. To be clear: you don't have to practice witchcraft or any other alternative form of spirituality to awaken your own inner witch. You may feel attracted to her symbolism, her style, or her stories but are not about to rush out to buy a cauldron or go sing songs to the sky. Maybe you're more of a nasty woman than a devotee of the Goddess. That's perfectly fine: the witch belongs to you too. I remain more convinced than ever that the concept of the witch endures because she transcends literalism and because she has so many dark and sparkling things to teach us. Many people get fixated on the "truth" of the witch, and numerous fine history books attempt to tackle the topic from the angle of so-called factuality. Did people actually believe in magic? They most certainly did and still do. Were the thousands of victims who were killed in the sixteenth- and seventeenth-century witch hunts actually witches themselves? Most likely not. Are witches real? Why, yes, you're reading the words of one. All of these things are true. But whether or not there were actually women and men who practiced witchcraft in Rome or Lancashire or Salem, say, is less interesting to me than the fact that the idea of witches has remained so evocative and influential and so, well, bewitching in the first place. In other words, the fact and the fiction of the witch are inextricably linked. Each informs the other and always has. And so, it's from this fuzzy, fabulist focal point that I regard her in the following chapters--and in general. I'm fascinated by how one archetype can encompass so many different facets. The witch is a notorious shape-shifter, and she comes in many guises: A hag in a pointy hat, cackling madly as she boils a pot of bones. A scarlet-lipped seductress slipping a potion into the drink of her unsuspecting paramour. A cross-dressing French revolutionary who hears the voices of angels and saints. A perfectly coiffed suburban housewife, twitching her nose to change her circumstances at will, despite her husband's protests. A woman dancing in New York City's Central Park with her coven to mark the change of the seasons or a new lunar phase. The witch has a green face and a fleet of flying monkeys. She wears scarves and leather and lace. She lives in Africa; on the island of Aeaea; in a tower; in a chicken-leg hut; in Peoria, Illinois. She lurks in the forests of fairy tales, in the gilded frames of paintings, in the plotlines of sitcoms and YA novels, and between the bars of ghostly blues songs. She is solitary. She comes in threes. She's a member of a coven. Sometimes she's a he. She is stunning, she is hideous, she is insidious, she is ubiquitous. She is our downfall. She is our deliverance. Our witches say as much about us as they do about anything else--for better and for worse. More than anything, though, the witch is a shining and shadowy symbol of female power and a force for subverting the status quo. No matter what form she takes, she remains an electric source of magical agitation that we can all plug into whenever we need a high-voltage charge. She is also a vessel that contains our conflicting feelings about female power: our fear of it, our desire for it, and our hope that it can--and will--grow stronger, despite the flames that are thrown at it. Whether the witch is depicted as villainous or valorous, she is always a figure of freedom--both its loss and its gain. She is perhaps the only female archetype who is an independent operator. Virgins, whores, daughters, mothers, wives--each of these is defined by whom she is sleeping with or not, the care that she is giving or that is given to her, or some sort of symbiotic debt that she must eventually pay. The witch owes nothing. That is what makes her dangerous. And that is what makes her divine. Witches have power on their own terms. They have agency. They create. They praise. They commune with the spiritual realm, freely and free of any mediator. They metamorphose, and they make things happen. They are change agents whose primary purpose is to transform the world as it is into the world they would like it to be. This is also why being called a witch and calling oneself a witch are usually two vastly different experiences. In the first case, it's often an act of degradation, an attack against a perceived threat. The second is an act of reclamation, an expression of autonomy and pride. Both of these aspects of the archetype are important to keep in mind. They may seem like contradictions, but there is much to glean from their interplay. The witch is the ultimate feminist icon because she is a fully rounded symbol of female oppression and liberation. She shows us how to tap into our own might and magic, despite the many who try to strip us of our power. We need her now more than ever. What follows, then, is an exploration of the archetype of the witch: meditations on her various aspects and associations, questions she's conjured throughout my life, and lessons I've learned from walking the witch's path. And it is a permission slip for you too to identify with her, should you feel yourself falling under her spell. Look around. Look within. The witch is waking up. Excerpted from Waking the Witch: Reflections on Women, Magic, and Power by Pam Grossman All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.