This article studies how witchcraft and contrasting Montreal Pagan traditions, including Wicca and Reclaiming Witchcraft, shape queer and transgender negotiations of gender norms. Magical practice is treated as one mechanism through which binary gender expectations can be contested both inside and outside Pagan community life.
It sits close to the center of the doctoral research arc because it brings together ritual practice, gender identity, and questions of legitimacy without reducing any of them to metaphor. The contributor listing ties the publication to Universite du Quebec a Montreal.
The journal record is generally paywalled through SAGE, so the site keeps the citation and DOI visible even where open full text is not available.