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Ye lyttle salem maide: A story of witchcraft examines the quiet terror of communal judgment during an era ruled by fear and superstition. It presents the emotional isolation of those caught in the currents of suspicion, particularly women whose actions are misread through a lens of moral rigidity. The story reveals how innocence is vulnerable in a world shaped by fear rather than truth, where social codes become weapons and perception overrides justice. Set against the backdrop of witchcraft panic, it explores how power operates through silence, whispers, and conformity, leaving little room…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Ye lyttle salem maide: A story of witchcraft examines the quiet terror of communal judgment during an era ruled by fear and superstition. It presents the emotional isolation of those caught in the currents of suspicion, particularly women whose actions are misread through a lens of moral rigidity. The story reveals how innocence is vulnerable in a world shaped by fear rather than truth, where social codes become weapons and perception overrides justice. Set against the backdrop of witchcraft panic, it explores how power operates through silence, whispers, and conformity, leaving little room for defense. The narrative draws a stark contrast between inner clarity and public hysteria, questioning how easily virtue can be recast as guilt. Through its focus on restrained dialogue and internal tension, the novel explores how collective anxiety reshapes identity and trust. The characters reflect a community spiraling into distrust, where survival demands either submission or quiet resistance. The story underscores how fear strips away nuance, and how even fleeting encounters can trigger lasting consequences in a culture eager to condemn.
Autorenporträt
Pauline Bradford Mackie was born on July 5, 1873, in Fairfield, Connecticut, to Reverend Andrew Mackie, an Episcopal clergyman. After graduating from Toledo High School, she began her writing career at the Toledo Blade, but soon shifted her focus entirely to fiction and drama. Many of her early works appeared in periodicals before she succeeded in publishing her novels in book form, despite initial challenges with publishers. Her marriage to Dr. Herbert M ller Hopkins, a professor of Latin who later chaired the department at Trinity College in Hartford, led her to Berkeley, California. There, she produced several historical novels including A Georgian Actress, which explored early American colonial life and the transition of a frontier girl into an actress in London. Mackie was also known for Mademoiselle de Berny and The Washingtonians, novels centered on political and social life in Washington, D.C., during the Civil War. She wrote Ye Lyttle Salem Maide, a vivid portrayal of Puritan Salem, and The Story of Kate, which depicted a young woman s struggles and independence in rural California. Her fiction often featured strong female protagonists and rich historical detail.