
The Conversation Weekly Ghosts vs demons: a 16th century Halloween showdown
Oct 30, 2025
Penelope Geng, an associate professor of English at Macalester College, dives into 16th-century fears surrounding witches and demons. She recounts James VI's terrifying royal journey and his witchcraft fears, prompting him to write ‘Daemonologie.’ Explore the clash between Protestantism and ghostly beliefs, and how this shaped societal views on supernatural entities. Geng also discusses the lingering impact of these beliefs in modern culture, contrasting the fear of demons with the nostalgia for ghosts.
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
Royal Witchcraft Origin Story
- James VI believed witchcraft targeted him after a storm sank a ship on his return from Denmark in 1590.
- Tortured confessions linked a Danish woman to a conspiracy and triggered the North Berwick witch trials.
Demonologie As Political Theology
- James wrote Demonologie in 1597 to argue witches served the devil and to rebut skeptics like Reginald Scott.
- The treatise framed witchcraft as a theological and political problem, not just superstition.
Reginald Scott's Skeptical Challenge
- Reginald Scott published The Discovery of Witchcraft in 1584 arguing witches were deluded marginal women, often Catholic.
- Scott's skeptical view offended James, who publicly rejected it in his preface to Demonologie.



