Confessing to "Familiarity with the Devils," Mary Johnson, a servant, was executed by Connecticut
officials in 1648. A wealthy Boston widow, Ann Hibbens, was hanged in 1656 for casting spells on her neighbors.
In 1662, Ann Cole was "taken with very strange Fits" and fueled an outbreak of witchcraft accusations
in Hartford a generation before the notorious events in Salem took place.
More than three hundred years later the question still haunts us: Why were these and other women likely witches?
Why were they vulnerable to accusations of witchcraft? In this work Carol Karlsen reveals the social construction
of witchcraft in seventeenth-century New England and illuminates the larger contours of gender relations in that
society.
"A pioneer work in . . . the sexual structuring of society. This is not just another book about witchcraft."
--Edmund S. Morgan, Yale University
"A remarkable achievement. The 'witches' come alive in this book, not as stereotypes, but as real women living
in a society that suspected and feared their independence and combativeness."
--Mary Beth Norton, Mary Donlon Alger Professor of American History, Cornell University