About This Book
The author surveys beliefs about malignant spirits across cultures, tracing their origins from displaced deities and natural forces, and offering a typology that groups manifestations—hunger, fire, cold, elemental storms, animal forms, hostile peoples, barrenness, and obstructive forces—by function and symbolism. Drawing on folklore, myth, ritual practices, and comparative religion, the study shows how monstrous forms evolve, are degraded from divine antecedents, and persist in customs, sacrifices, and place-based superstitions. It also considers psychological and social consequences of demonological thought, its institutional effects, and the survival of monster-forms in language, art, and popular observances.