JWL.Freakwitch.net

February 20, 2005

History of the Witch Hunts

I've mentioned Silvia Federici's Caliban and the Witch in this space before. Well, I was reading it, put it down several weeks ago, and got distracted. I just recently picked it up again, and got to some very meaty analysis on the origins and effects of the Great Witch-Hunt in Europe. From the text:
In this "century of geniuses" -- Bacon, Kepler, Galileo, Shakespeare, Pascal, Descartes -- a century that saw the triumph of the Copernican Revolution, the birth of modern science, and the development of philosophical and scientific rationalism, witchcraft became one of the favorite subjects of debate for the European cultural elites. Judges, lawyers, statesmen, philosophers, scientists, theologians all became preoccupied with the "problem," wrote pamphlets and demonologies, agreed that this was the most nefarious crime, and called for its punishment.
This is an important historical fact. The ubiquity of "the witch problem," even among the intelligentsia, indicates deep cultural, social, and political undercurrents. For Federici, this fact indicates that "there can be no doubt ... that the witch-hunt was a major political initiative" as opposed to a religious or theological initiative. She does not minimize the role of the church in the witch-hunts, but points out that "at its peak, the secular courts conducted most of the trials, while in the areas where the Inquisition operated (Italy and Spain) the number of executions remained comparatively low."

In addition, it seems to me that the very division between political power and religious power is a blurry one. I'm not sure this distinction is so easy to make, though Federici's point about the political nature of the witch hunts is well-taken.

To further illustrate her point that the witch-hunts were more political than religious, Federici writes that

both Catholic and Protestant nations, at war against each other in every other respect, joined arms and shared arguments to persecute witches. Thus, it is no exaggeration to claim that the witch-hunt was the first unifying terrain in the politics of the new European nation-states, the first example, after the schism brought about by the Reformation, of a European unification. For, crossing all boundaries, the witch-hunt spread from France and Italy to Germany, Switzerland, England, Scotland, and Sweden.
It is no accident that this same period in history saw the dawn of capitalism and the brutalities of primitive accumulation and enclosure. The populace had to be controlled, subdued by fear or terror, and shown what it is necessary for them to do in order to survive. Federici concludes that
If we consider the historical context in which the witch-hunt occurred, the gender and class of the accused, and the effects of the persecution, then we must conclude that witch-hunting in Europe was an attack on women's resistance to the spread of capitalist relations and the power that women had gained by virtue of their sexuality, their control over reproduction, and their ability to heal.
Many people will read this and dismiss it as more propaganda. But the facts are there; untold thousands of people were tortured and murdered, vast tracts of land changed hands in terms of property, and "a new patriarchal order where women's bodies, their labor, their sexual and reproductive powers were placed under the control of the state and transformed into economic resources."

Popular control through fear will not be unfamiliar to those of us who pay attention to the rhetoric of the BuShites. Fear and Uncertainty are sowed into the popular consciousness, fear of Things With Scary Names: Witches. Today's Witches are of course Terrorists. In both cases, precise definitions of what qualifies one as a witch/terrorist are murky and ambiguous. The laws shifted then, as they have today, to make it easier for the authorities to prosecute witches:

That the charges in the trials often referred to events that had occured decades earlier, that witchcraft was made a crimen exceptum, that is, a crime to be investigated by special means, torture included, and it was punishable even in the absence of any proven damage to persons and things -- all these factors indicate that the target of the witch-hunt -- (as it is often true with political repression in times of intense social change and conflict) -- were not socially recognized crimes, but previously accepted practices and groups of individuals that had to be eradicated from the community, through terror and criminalization. In this sense, the charge of witchcraft performed a function similar to that performed by ... the charge of "terrorism" in our times. The very vagueness of the charge -- the fact that it was impossible to prove it, while at the same time it evoked the maximum of horror -- meant that it could be used to punish any form of protest and to generate suspicion even towards the most ordinary aspects of daily life.
So apart from the resonance of that time with our own time, these insights give me a deeper understanding of the political machinations at work in general. It is oversimplistic to say "it's capitalism's fault" or "it's the Church's fault" or anything else; but there can be no doubt that power relations are at work, and those with power will always move toward attempts to increase power, and attempts of one group to increase power usually means reducing the power of the other group.

One must remember that the Witch Hunts were concurrent with the enclosure movements, where thousands of peasants were displaced from common lands and forced to enter the money economy as wageslaves in the birth of our glorified capitalist economy. It was a violent time; repression was systematic. And in every repressive state, there is an archetype of fear brought into the foreground to blame it all on. People were taught to fear the witches, and even more tragically, people were taught to fear being a witch.

cultural differences

In Maine, I often try to explain to east-coasters (even rural, stratified east-coasters like Mainahs) how different the culture in the midwest is. Many young Mainers haven't been outside of Maine much. I tell them that, for the most part, they don't know what they have here. There are subtle, but tangible differences in culture. People seem more grounded here, less caught up in artificial materialism and status. People seem less asleep here.

I was reading an article in my hometown newspaper today that illustrated some of these differences. From the article:

Junk food and smoking habits are hardly limited to Kentucky. Every state in the Coronary Valley [from Ohio/Indiana/Kentucky down to Louisiana] has at least 40 percent of its residents in the same heart risk boat as Kentucky.

But the risk is not equal nationwide. In other states, the population with increased heart risk can be as low as 27 percent.

That means regional and cultural differences must be playing a role.

"It is somewhat of a societal thing. It's like people accept it as part of life," said Dr. Steve Steinhubl, a cardiologist with the University of Kentucky.

So given that I was raised in this culture, it can be no surprise that I have health issues in this area that I've been struggling for years to overcome. It's interesting that a culture can arise where it encourages nearly half of its population to slowly kill itself. At worst this is genocide; at best it is nihilism on a mass scale.

car mystique

Q: What's the difference between a porcupine and a BMW?
A: A porcupine has pricks on the outside.
-- a coworker, reacting to an irate caller last night
I was thinking of the mystique of cars today, oddly enough when I was driving to work. Cars have so much mystique that there are even some cars that are named after that particular phenomenon.

While I was driving, a memory surfaced from around the time I had just graduated high school; some friends of mine were all excited about going to the local BMW dealer to check out a new "beamer." We were all kids; none of us could afford a BMW. I remember two things about that moment. First, my friends had a slightly glazed look in their eyes when they talked about the BMW; this piece of oil-burning machinery produced a sense of awe and wonder not in its inherent ability to burn oil and move from place to place, but rather in its mere existence as a "BMW." This BMW-ness was almost ineffable to these teenage masculine eyes.

Second, I was almost completely uninterested in going to see these cars. My first job out of high school was as a car stereo/electronics installer; I used to install stereos, alarms, cellphones, and the like (this was back in the day when cellphones had to be installed in cars, or converted to "bag phones"). So even then, some of the romanticism around cars had worn off for me; I was around cars -- some of them even nice -- every day at work.

But even before that job, I was never as infected with car mystique as so many Americans are. I'm not quite sure why, but it remains the case to this day. My current job entails me talking to people who are just beginning to realize that their car is not functional; so in addition to my basic task of arranging help for people broken down on the side of the road, I almost see myself as a sort of conceptual midwife, bringing forth that realization that they won't have their vehicle to drive for the time being.

This realization, I believe, is something that increasing numbers of people will have to confront. Oil is becoming more expensive and more scarce; gasoline prices are going up, which in turn will drive up the price of nearly everything else. People will no longer be able to afford to have a car for each driver in the family.

I can't help but wonder what will happen when using gas-burning vehicles will no longer be a viable option. The reality of adjusting to oil-fuel-less existence will be difficult enough without the fetishization of car mystique in the way.

Sources

"Any journalist depends on their sources -- their government sources."
--Lesley Stahl, Real Time with Bill Maher

February 17, 2005

Nuff said.

25 million downloads. Very cool.

February 10, 2005

studio updates

Well, I haven't written in a while. I've been quite busy, as always, and I suppose not terribly inspired to write, or I'd have made time for it.

On a personal level, it's been an interesting few weeks. I've kept up with the don't-eat-after-9pm thing, and I've started back at the gym regularly. Still kinda waiting for the energy boost that comes from working out; that will come with time as my body re-acclimates to physical activity.

The big news is that all the studio upgrades are in place and functional. The coolest part of this is that all my audio data lives on my portable hard drive, so when I go to the studio I can just take the hard drive with me, plug it in, and begin working immediately. Then when I come home to the laptop, I can plug it in there and get more work done. Pretty cool, and a very efficient way to work. I can also back up data to the studio computer's hard drive.

I've spent lots of time editing a Freakwitch song and it's going well. After the past year of assimilating all the new studio technology, I finally have the confidence to know what to do with all this gear.

Matt and I have been talking about ways in which we are "getting in our own way." And we both feel energy shifting again toward getting this album finished. This is good.

I've started thinking more about acoustic treatments for the studio, which are desperately needed. There was a thread on the cakewalk forums about some very efficient -- and reasonably priced -- ways to build bass traps that look intriguing. It will still be a significant expenditure, several hundred dollars at least (without even insulating the ceiling, another important step in treating the studio), but the results should speak for themselves.

Acoustic treatments are definitely on the horizon, as I view them as necessary especially as we get closer to mixing the album.