Witches

Salon 55

The witch has long been more than a woman of “ill repute”—she has been a healer, folk doctor, herbalist, and midwife whose knowledge and independence have consistently posed a threat to entrenched power structures. Labeling women as “witches” has historically served to silence and punish those who challenge the status quo.

From the witch trials of Salem to the red-baiting of McCarthyism, so-called “witch-hunts” have functioned as tools of repression, sowing fear, distrust, and division to preserve the social order. Today, in a time of rising misogyny, violence against women, and efforts to erode their rights, the witch re-emerges—both in pop culture and in political consciousness—as a figure of resistance and renewal.

This salon invites us to reflect on the figure of the witch as a lens for understanding power, fear, and freedom.

Together, we explore: What can we learn from witches—and the fear they inspire? What does the witch’s power represent, and where does it come from? How have witches been portrayed across cultures—and misrepresented in Western media? What might a society that celebrated witches look like? Why does the witch endure as a cultural icon—and what might she still teach us?

This Salon took place on June 17th, 2025.

Speakers

Video Contributors

Reading List

More Salons