Overview
It is a historical phenomenon that while
thousands of women were being burnt as witches in early modern Europe,
the English - although there were a few celebrated trials and
executions, one of which the play dramatises - were not widely infected
by the witch-craze. The stage seems to have provided an outlet for
anxieties about witchcraft, as well as an opportunity for public
analysis. The Witch of Edmonton (1621) manifests this fundamentally
reasonable attitude, with Dekker insisting on justice for the poor and
oppressed, Ford providing psychological character studies, and Rowley
the clowning. The village community of Edmonton feels threatened by two
misfits, Old Mother Sawyer, who has turned to the devil to aid her
against her unfeeling neighbours, and Frank, who refuses to marry the
woman of his father's choice and ends up murdering her. This edition
shows how the play generates sympathy for both and how contemporaries
would have responded to its presentation of village life and witchcraft.