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Raising the Dead: A History of Early Modern Necromancy, an Illustrated Lecture with Dr. Alexander Cummins

August 3 @ 7:00 pm - 8:00 pm

| $12

Raising the Dead: A History of Early Modern Necromancy, an Illustrated Lecture with Dr. Alexander Cummins

Date: Wednesday, August 3rd
Time: 7pm
Admission: $12
Location: Morbid Anatomy Museum, 424 Third Avenue, 11215 Brooklyn NY

Tickets Here: http://www.brownpapertickets.com/event/2551636

The early modern age of 1500-1700 was a period of European colonial expansion into the so-called New World, civil wars, famine, and plague: life could indeed be nasty, brutish, and short. Amidst such fragile mortality, people prayed for their deceased, petitioned elevated Christian martyrs, witnessed ghosts, and whispered of black magic in midnight graveyards.

This talk investigates the roles and powers of the dead in Western occult philosophy and magical practices: from magical funerary customs to corpses as spell components, and from the exorcism and summoning of ghosts and spirits to early sensationalist reports of the customs of various indigenous peoples of the Americas.

Finally, this talk will investigate the diabolical associations of necromancy and nigromancy with witchcraft and demonology, offering analysis of a number of pre-modern rituals and techniques involving shades of the dead.

Dr. Alexander Cummins is an historian of early modern magic and the emotions who feels the dead should be afforded a chance to speak for themselves. His work focuses on grimoires, folk magic, divination, and sorcery as well as, of course, necromancy and demonology. He is reachable through his website http://www.alexandercummins.squarespace.com/ and curates a storehouse of scanned magical texts at http://www.grimoiresontape.tumblr.com/

Tickets are non-refundable unless the event is canceled

Details

Date:
August 3
Time:
7:00 pm - 8:00 pm
Cost:
$12
Event Category:

Venue

Morbid Anatomy Museum
424A 3rd Ave, Brooklyn, NY 11215 United States
+ Google Map
Phone:
3477991017
Website:
morbidanatomymuseum.org