They Flew: A History of the Impossible

Available
Product Details
Price
$35.00  $32.55
Publisher
Yale University Press
Publish Date
Pages
512
Dimensions
6.56 X 9.48 X 1.32 inches | 1.96 pounds
Language
English
Type
Hardcover
EAN/UPC
9780300259803

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About the Author
Carlos M. N. Eire is the T. L. Riggs Professor of History and Religious Studies at Yale University. He is the author of Waiting for Snow in Havana, winner of the National Book Award, and of War Against the Idols; A Very Brief History of Eternity; and Reformations. He lives in Guilford, CT.
Reviews
"Eire examines in this insightful study such phenomena as levitation and bilocation (being in two places at once) that were frequently attributed to saints and mystics in the early modern era. . . . Readers interested in magic, religion, or medieval history will want to take a look."--Publishers Weekly

"This book is a game-changer. Eire engages in extensive primary textual work in multiple languages, goes down all the skeptical pathways (including demonological ones), and practices the historian's bracketing of the obvious truth question: "Well, did these people fly or not?" Eire's deeper conclusion is secreted, or just shouted, in the title: They Flew. And that, well, that changes everything."--Jeffrey J. Kripal, author of The Superhumanities: Historical Precedents, Moral Objections, New Realities

"Eire has once again done the impossible: written a book with the pace of a thriller and the scope of a historical monograph. He has historically unraveled levitations and bilocations, where the temporal merges with the spiritual: Newton's gravity with Teresa's ecstasies. Specialists will find deep insights and general readers will enter a new fascinating universe."--Jaume Aurell, author of Medieval Self-Coronations: The History and Symbolism of a Ritual

"With sophistication and subtlety, sensitivity and sympathy, Carlos Eire follows the unlikely thread of abundant testimonies about human levitation and bilocation in sixteenth- and seventeenth-century Catholic Europe. His book invites self-examination about cocksure assumptions and uncritical dogmatisms in the present. A profound meditation on religion, history, and the meanings of modernity, They Flew shows that a history of the impossible is not just possible--it has now been realized."--Brad S. Gregory, author of The Unintended Reformation: How a Religious Revolution Secularized Society

"Eire has written an engaging and monumental history of supernatural belief during a period when the miraculous coincided with the Age of Reason: flying nuns and friars were contemporaries of Isaac Newton. For Protestants and Catholics alike, the supernatural imaginary maintained a powerful hold."--Alison Weber, University of Virginia

"Only Carlos Eire could take us on this journey to the impossible. A brilliant feat of scholarship and imagination that requires us to look again at an early modern world we thought we knew."--Bruce Gordon, Yale University