• Hi guest! As you can see, the new Wizard Forums has been revived, and we are glad to have you visiting our site! However, it would be really helpful, both to you and us, if you registered on our website! Registering allows you to see all posts, and make posts yourself, which would be great if you could share your knowledge and opinions with us! You could also make posts to ask questions!
  • ⚠️ Library Warning!

    In order to view any of the threads in this section, you must meet one of the following requirements!
    1. You must either be a Benefactor. See here for more: Account Upgrades
    2. OR you must have shared a book in the Book Shares section already
    3. OR you must have posted 50 threads in the Occult Sections of the forum (The Order)
    4. OR you must have been registered for OVER a week, AND made at least 1 post in the Occult Sections in the last week
    Since you cannot yet read the rules thread here, please read it on the create thread page. The rules will appear when you press the "Post Thread" button.

Book – PDF The Stryx-Witch (Elements in Magic) by Daniel Ogden

Share a PDF of a book.

Dayonisos

Zealot
Joined
Jul 18, 2023
Messages
121
Reaction score
143
Awards
1
The Stryx-Witch (Elements in Magic) by Daniel Ogden

Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!

The strix was a persistent feature of the folklore of the Roman world and subsequently that of the Latin West and the Greek East. She was a woman that flew by night, either in an owl-like form or in the form of a projected soul, in order to penetrate homes by surreptitious means and thereby devour, blight or steal the new-born babies within them. The motif-set of the ideal narrative of a strix attack - the 'strix-paradigm' - is reconstructed from Ovid, Petronius, John Damascene and other sources, and the paradigm's impact is traced upon the typically gruesome representation of witches in Latin literature. The concept of the strix is contextualised against the longue-durée notion of the child-killing demon, which is found already in the ancient Near East, and shown to retain a currency still as informing the projection of the vampire in Victorian fiction.
 
Top