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The wonders of the invisible world by cotton mather
The wonders of the invisible world by cotton mather









20th century full red goatskin elegantly stamped in blind with gilt-stamped cornerpieces, raised bands, gilt-lettered spine.

the wonders of the invisible world by cotton mather the wonders of the invisible world by cotton mather

It is the only 17th-century edition that published the full account for English readers, and it provides a touchstone, then and now, for the complex and contradictory spirit of the United States. Mather's work, the most widely published and discussed contemporary account of the Trials, is exceptionally scarce on the market in its earliest imprints: the last copy at auction of the Boston first edition, published approximately two months before this edition, appeared in 1987 this edition has been seen only three times at auction in over 20 years. The story of the Salem Witch Trials has remained evocative over centuries in part thanks to its capacity for symbolic interpretation, from the McCarthy-era retelling THE CRUCIBLE to feminist arguments that "Vulnerable women pay the price for circumstances that are often beyond their control" (THE WASHINGTON POST, "What the Salem witches can teach us about how we treat women today," 2018). In the process of attempting to reconcile the moral, religious, and scientific contradictions of the event, Mather created a powerful story of colonial New England exceptionalism - a narrative that would become part of the developing culture of the modern United States. It is this high-stakes combination of the righteously justified with the unjustifiable that makes Mather's account so perversely compelling: "like a criminal who protests his innocence, the more he scribbled, the more he disclosed" (Miller 201). Evil, in which the Puritans are uniquely suited to triumph. He frames their community struggles into an epic narrative of Good vs. Indeed, Mather's description of the Trials reads as a defense of his own religious views, and of the larger Puritan society.

the wonders of the invisible world by cotton mather

Before the Salem Witch Trials, Cotton Mather had already established himself as a leading voice in the investigation of witchcraft within the New England Puritan community contemporaries like Robert Calef argued that Mather's 1689 book MEMORABLE PROVIDENCES "conduced much to the kindling of those Flames" of the Trials (MORE WONDERS OF THE INVISIBLE WORLD, 152).

the wonders of the invisible world by cotton mather

The scarce first London edition of the most famous contemporary account of the Salem Witch Trials.











The wonders of the invisible world by cotton mather