
Hysteria in Salem: Nothing to See Here
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Move along folks, the Salem Witch Trials were the product of hysteria, and that's all you need to know. . .
or NOT
We kick off with a midnight ride that would make Paul Revere jealous—except instead of warning about the British, townspeople were frantically summoning help for a girl supposedly being tortured by a witch's specter. But before you roll your eyes and mutter "mass hysteria," consider this: What if the Salem Witch Trials weren't the product of unhinged women with wandering uteruses (yes, that's a real historical medical theory), but rather ordinary people responding to extraordinary fear in disturbingly familiar ways?
Join us as we trace witch panics from Springfield to Hartford, uncovering a pattern that's less "crazy town" and more "calculated legal proceedings." We'll explore why dismissing these events as hysteria might be the most dangerous mistake we can make—especially when the same human behaviors that fueled 17th-century witch hunts are alive and well in. Spoiler alert: We're not as evolved as we think we are.
Fair warning: Contains references to wandering uteruses, midnight rides, and uncomfortable parallels to contemporary society.
Salem Witch Trials Documentary Archive and Transcription Project
Massachusetts Court of Oyer and Terminer Documents, The Salem Witch Trials Collection, Peabody Essex Museum
Records of the Salem Witch-Hunt
The Thing About Salem Website
The Thing About Salem YouTube
The Thing About Salem Patreon
The Thing About Witch Hunts YouTube
The Thing About Witch Hunts Website