Results 151 to 160 of about 9,240 (195)
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Demonologies

2013
Abstract Written by learned physicians, jurists, and theologians, demonologies are compendious tracts that examine all aspects of the interactions alleged to take place between Satan and his demons (or fallen angels) and human beings, in particular women accused of being witches.
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Techno-demonology

Journal for the Study of Religion, Nature and Culture, 2006
In this paper I argue that an important strand of ecotheology should be an articulated techno-demonology—an understanding of the ways that technologies increasingly confront us as indifferent or malign agencies. Drawing particularly on the New Testament language of spiritual agencies, I consider in turn three necessary components of techno-demonology ...
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Shakespeare’s Demonology

2014
This volume in the long-running and acclaimed Shakespeare Dictionary series is a detailed, critical reference work examining all aspects of magic, good and evil, across Shakespeare's works. Topics covered include the representation of fairies, witches, ghosts, devils and spirits.
Marion Gibson, Jo Ann Esra
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Pound's Demonology

American Literary History, 1989
Some books are easy to review, others are more difficult. The easy ones are the ones where your feelings about the book are quite straightforward and one-sided (this is wonderful or this is terrible) and where you feel it reasonably easy to be objective.
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Demonology of geography

Voprosy literatury, 2019
The article examines the ‘geographical dimension’ of modern Russian prose, in particular, through a mythological, and even demonological, prism. The mythological-dimensional complex is especially prominent in the Urals-themed works by O. Slavnikova (2017 (2006)) and A.
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Demonology And Medicine

1997
Abstract THE scientific study of the human body and its diseases has had to contend-and to some extent still has to contend-with a mass of superstition, largely pre-Christian in origin, but supported, until quite modern times, by the whole weight of ecclesiastical authority.
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Christian Demonology. IV

The Jewish Quarterly Review, 1896
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