Dr Debra Parish - New book 'Prophets and Witches'

3 Jul 2025

Register for the Book Launch - Thursday 28 August (Hosted by Avid Reader in West End).

Register here. 

About the Book

Prophets and Witches offers an exploration of female prophecy and witchcraft during the political and religious upheavals of the English Revolutionary period from 1640 to 1660.
The religious fervour and End of Days enthusiasm precipitated by the Civil War opened the door for unprecedented numbers of women to achieve visibility and spiritual authority as prophets. However, as self-proclaimed instruments for God’s spirit, these women were also exposed to the charge of demonic possession or witchcraft. This book explores both the gender and political elements at work in the construction of the prophet as a witch. It uncovers the role of witchcraft in the dominant political and religious debates and power conflicts of the times which provides a crucial framework for the female prophet’s transformation from divine instrument to demonic witch. This study of the early modern prophet and witch reveals the fluidity, and at times close relationship of these assumed opposites.
This book is a valuable resource to students and scholars of early modern England, the English Civil War and all readers interested in female religiosity, prophecy, witchcraft, demonology and early Quakerism.

Critics’ Reviews
"In this welcome and nuanced study, Debra Parish maps out the murky borderlands between female prophecy, demonic possession and witch beliefs in revolutionary England, with a keen eye on the religious politics of the age.  The result is a reminder that the concept of witchcraft – and indeed divine authority – was bound into the larger debates of this turbulent period."
Darren Oldridge, University of Worcester, UK
“This makes a significant contribution to our knowledge of the period of the English Revolution, by teasing out the relationship between attitudes to religion, magic and gender, as they operated in a cross-fire over the appearance of radical prophetesses.” 
Ronald Hutton, University of Bristol, UK

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Debra Parish is a post-doctoral honorary research fellow in the School of Historical and Philosophical Inquiry at the University of Queensland. Her research interests are early modern women’s religiosity, prophecy and witchcraft. Her publications include a book chapter titled ‘Anna Trapnel: Prophet or Witch’ in Women on the Edge in Early Modern Europe (2019) and journal articles including ‘The Power of Female Piety’ (1992) and most recently ‘Civility, Gender and Women’s Preaching’ (2024). Debra’s book is a culmination of her many years researching, writing and teaching about women’s religious authority and agency, and the slippery identity of the early modern prophet and the witch.

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