http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2011/sep/27/amanda-knox-witch-hunts-italian-court?newsfeed=trueHere are the news headlines for 1486: in the fair city of Perugia, a she-devil hath falsely accused an inn-keeper of murder most vile … Sorry, let me start again. This isn't the 15th century, when "witches" were being hunted all over Europe, tortured into confessing and burned at the stake. In 2011, no one seriously believes that women go mad with lust and sell their souls to the devil – or do they?
Astonishingly, exactly that accusation has been made in an Italian court this week by a lawyer called Carlo Pacelli. He used the occasion of an appeal by the American student Amanda Knox against her conviction for the murder of a British student to call her an "enchanting witch" and attack her in terms that would be instantly recognisable to a mediaeval witch-finder.
The idea that women are natural liars has a long pedigree. The key document in this centuries-long tradition is the notorious witch-hunter's manual, the Malleus Maleficarum or The Hammer of Witches, which was commissioned by Pope Innocent VIII. The book was written by two Dominican monks and published in 1486. It unleashed a flood of irrational beliefs about women's "dual" nature. "A woman is beautiful to look upon, contaminating to the touch, and deadly to keep," the authors warned. They also claimed that "all witchcraft comes from carnal lust, which is in women insatiable".
It's not difficult to see these myths lurking behind Pacelli's description of Knox: "She was a diabolical, satantic, demonic she-devil. She was muddy on the outside and dirty on the inside. She has two souls, the clean one you see before you and the other." The lawyer's claim that she was motivated by "lust" could have come straight from the Malleus, which insists that women are more "carnal" than men.
SNIP
_________________________
Note: I like this article, but it does make the mistake of repeating the claim that Amanda "accused" the bar owner Patrick of murder. She did not. She consistently said she did not know what happened to Meredith. The police told her, during an overnight interrogation (with no attorney or translator present) that they KNEW she and Raffaele had been involved and that the bar owner was too. (They had seen on her cell phone a text from her to the bar owner that said "see you later" - and they took it literally.) Finally, she broke down enough to sign a statement saying that she'd had a vision of being in the kitchen with her hands covering her ears while Patrick was with Meredith in her room. A few hours later, she changed her mind, writing a note saying that that vision didn't seem real to her -- that her earlier recollection of being with Raffaele the whole time was more real. This first statement is what has been called a "confession" or an "accusation" depending on the context; in either case, the Italian Supreme Court ruled it inadmissible because of the lack of an attorney.