- The Burning Times
Infobox Film
name = The Burning Times
caption =
director = Donna Read
producer = Mary Armstrong
Margaret Pettigrew
Studio D, National Film Board of Canada
writer = Erna Buffie
starring =Starhawk
Matthew FoxMargot Adler
Professor Irving Smith
Thea Jensen, Barbara Roberts, Hhstorians
music =Loreena McKennitt
cinematography =
editing =
distributor = National Film Board of Canada
released =1990
runtime = 56 min., 13 sec.
country =Canada
language = English
budget =
preceded_by = "Goddess Remembered "
followed_by = "Full Circle"
website = http://www.nfb.ca/collection/films/fiche/?id=18315
amg_id = 1:184264
imdb_id = 0225233"The Burning Times" is a
1990 Canadian documentary about theEarly Modern European witchcraft trials .Toronto Globe and Mail, June 12, 1991 "Religion" by Jack Kapica, "Review of The Burning Times" transcribed at http://www.debunker.com/texts/burning_times.html retrieved on August 24, 2006] . It was directed by Donna Read and written by Erna Buffie, and features interviews with feminist andNeopagan notables, such asStarhawk ,Margot Adler , and Matthew Fox. "The Burning Times" is the second film in theNational Film Board of Canada 's "Women and Spirituality" series, following "'Goddess Remembered ". [http://www.nfb.ca/collection/films/fiche/index.php?id=29928]The film advances the theory that widespread violence against women and the neglect of our environment today can be traced back to those times.
The opening and closing theme music, composed by
Loreena McKennitt , was released as the track titled "Tango to Evora" on her album "The Visit".Criticism
In the film, Thea Jensen calls this period in history the "Women's Holocaust" and gives an estimate of a total of 9 million witches burned, admitting that this is a "high" estimate but quoting no alternative numbers. Scholarly "high" estimates range around 100,000, with estimates around 60,000 more common. [See
witchcraft trials : extrapolating from 12,000 attested executions, Brian Levac in "The Witch Hunt in Early Modern Europe" estimates 60,000 deaths, Anne Lewellyn Barstow in "Witchcraze" has 100,000 and Ronald Hutton in an unpublished essay "Counting the Witch Hunt" estimates 40,000 total executions.]Margot Adler , one of the featured historians in the film, recently stated: "We now know that most persecutions of witches occurred during a 100-year period, between 1550 and 1650, and the total number hanged or burned probably did not exceed 40,000." [http://www.beliefnet.com/story/17/story_1744_1.html] Adler goes on to say, in the same article, that "The Burning Times" [film] "...heartrending and appalling descriptions of some of the trials, tortures, and deaths that did occur is not nullified by this new and more accurate research. But it serves no end to perpetuate the miscalculation; it's time to put away the exaggerated numbers forever." [http://www.beliefnet.com/story/40/story_4007.html]The movie is inaccurate in other respects, placing
Trier inFrance instead ofGermany , dating a stone cross there that is recorded to have been erected in 958 AD to 1132 AD without further explanation. The cross is shown as a "symbol of a new religious cult that was sweeping across Europe," despite Christian presence since 286. Robert Eady, a member of theCatholic Civil Rights League in Canada, has cited the film in a complaint to broadcast regulators, in particular mentioning offense at the movie's quote: "it took the Church two hundred years of terror and death to transform the image of paganism into devil worship, and folk culture into heresy." Eady describes the documentary as propaganda intended to represent the Christian Church as "a wicked, patriarchal,misogynist institution" Kapica adds "Women have genuine grievances with the Church. "The Burning Times"', however, is not going to help their cause."ee also
*Witch Trials in Early Modern Europe in Neopaganism and Feminism
References
External links
*http://imdb.com/title/tt0225233/
*http://www2.nfb.ca/boutique/XXNFBibeCCtpItmDspRte.jsp?section=14062&item=141797
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