Ghosts: A Social History, vol 2

Ghosts: A Social History, vol 2
Author: Owen Davies
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Total Pages: 337
Release: 2024-08-01
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1040243134

Reveals changing perceptions of ghosts at different social levels from the Reformation through to the twentieth century in Britain and America. This five-volume set focuses on the key published debates that emerged in each century, and illustrates the range of literary formats that reported or discussed ghosts.

Ghosts: A Social History, vol 1

Ghosts: A Social History, vol 1
Author: Owen Davies
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Total Pages: 234
Release: 2024-08-01
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1040233570

Reveals changing perceptions of ghosts at different social levels from the Reformation through to the twentieth century in Britain and America. This five-volume set focuses on the key published debates that emerged in each century, and illustrates the range of literary formats that reported or discussed ghosts.

Ghosts: A Social History, vol 4

Ghosts: A Social History, vol 4
Author: Owen Davies
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Total Pages: 549
Release: 2024-08-01
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1040249310

Reveals changing perceptions of ghosts at different social levels from the Reformation through to the twentieth century in Britain and America. This five-volume set focuses on the key published debates that emerged in each century, and illustrates the range of literary formats that reported or discussed ghosts.

Ghosts: A Social History, vol 3

Ghosts: A Social History, vol 3
Author: Owen Davies
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Total Pages: 341
Release: 2024-08-01
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1040248756

Reveals changing perceptions of ghosts at different social levels from the Reformation through to the twentieth century in Britain and America. This five-volume set focuses on the key published debates that emerged in each century, and illustrates the range of literary formats that reported or discussed ghosts.

Ghosts: A Social History, vol 5

Ghosts: A Social History, vol 5
Author: Owen Davies
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Total Pages: 237
Release: 2024-08-01
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1040243142

Reveals changing perceptions of ghosts at different social levels from the Reformation through to the twentieth century in Britain and America. This five-volume set focuses on the key published debates that emerged in each century, and illustrates the range of literary formats that reported or discussed ghosts.

The Haunted

The Haunted
Author: O. Davies
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2007-10-10
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780230237100

'The Haunted' is the first truly comprehensive social history of ghosts. Using fascinating and entertaining examples, Davies places the history of ghosts within their wider social and cultural context, and examines why a belief in ghosts continues to be vibrant, socially relevant and historically illuminating.

A Social History of Modern Art, Volume 2

A Social History of Modern Art, Volume 2
Author: Albert Boime
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Total Pages: 740
Release: 1993-05-15
Genre: Art
ISBN: 9780226063362

In this second volume, Albert Boime continues his work on the social history of Western art in the Modern epoch. This volume offers a major critique and revisionist interpretation of Western European culture, history, and society from Napoleon's seizure of power to 1815. Boime argues that Napoleon manipulated the production of images, as well as information generally, in order to maintain his political hegemony. He examines the works of French painters such as Jacques-Louis David and Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres, to illustrate how the art of the time helped to further the emperor's propagandistic goals. He also explores the work of contemporaneous English genre painters, Spain's Francisco de Goya, the German Romantics Philipp Otto Runge and Caspar David Friedrich, and the emergence of a national Italian art. Heavily illustrated, this volume is an invaluable social history of modern art during the Napoleonic era. Stimulating and informative, this volume will become a valuable resource for faculty and undergraduates.—R. W. Liscombe, Choice

Ghost of the Ozarks

Ghost of the Ozarks
Author: Brooks Blevins
Publisher: University of Illinois Press
Total Pages: 306
Release: 2012-03-15
Genre: True Crime
ISBN: 0252094115

In 1929, in a remote county of the Arkansas Ozarks, the gruesome murder of harmonica-playing drifter Connie Franklin and the brutal rape of his teenaged fiancée captured the attention of a nation on the cusp of the Great Depression. National press from coast to coast ran stories of the sensational exploits of night-riding moonshiners, powerful "Barons of the Hills," and a world of feudal oppression in the isolation of the rugged Ozarks. The ensuing arrest of five local men for both crimes and the confusion and superstition surrounding the trial and conviction gave Stone County a dubious and short-lived notoriety. Closely examining how the story and its regional setting were interpreted by the media, Brooks Blevins recounts the gripping events of the murder investigation and trial, where a man claiming to be the murder victim--the "Ghost" of the Ozarks--appeared to testify. Local conditions in Stone County, which had no electricity and only one long-distance telephone line, frustrated the dozen or more reporters who found their way to the rural Ozarks, and the developments following the arrests often prompted reporters' caricatures of the region: accusations of imposture and insanity, revelations of hidden pasts and assumed names, and threats of widespread violence. Locating the past squarely within the major currents of American history, Ghost of the Ozarks: Murder and Memory in the Upland South paints a convincing backdrop to a story that, more than 80 years later, remains riddled with mystery.

Spiritualism, Mesmerism and the Occult, 1800–1920 Vol 1

Spiritualism, Mesmerism and the Occult, 1800–1920 Vol 1
Author: Shane McCorristine
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 1950
Release: 2021-12-17
Genre: History
ISBN: 1000561445

This edition provides an insight into the dark areas between Victorian science, medicine and religion. The rare reset source material in this collection is organized thematically and spans the period from initial mesmeric experiments at the beginning of the nineteenth century to the decline of the Society for Psychical Research in the 1920s.

Ghosts

Ghosts
Author: Lisa Morton
Publisher: Reaktion Books
Total Pages: 210
Release: 2015-09-15
Genre: History
ISBN: 1780235372

From that cheerful puff of smoke known as Casper to the hunkiest potter living or dead, Sam Wheat, there is probably no more iconic entity in supernatural history than the ghost. And these are just recent examples. From the earliest writings such as the Epic of Gilgamesh to today’s ghost-hunting reality TV shows, ghosts have chilled the air of nearly every era and every culture in human history. In this book, Lisa Morton uses her scholarly prowess—more powerful than any proton pack—to wrangle together history’s most enduring ghosts into an entertaining and comprehensive look at what otherwise seems to always evade our eyes. Tracing the ghost’s constantly shifting contours, Morton asks the most direct question—What exactly is a ghost?—and examines related entities such as poltergeists, wraiths, and revenants. She asks how a ghost is related to a soul, and she outlines all the different kinds of ghosts there are. To do so, she visits the spirits of the classical world, including the five-part Egyptian soul and the first haunted-house, conceived in the Roman playwright Plautus’s comedy, Mostellaria. She confronts us with the frightening phantoms of the Middle Ages—who could incinerate priests and devour children—and reminds us of the nineteenth-century rise of Spiritualism, a religion essentially devoted to ghosts. She visits with the Indian bhuta and goes to the Hungry Ghost Festival in China, and of course she spends time in Mexico, where ghosts have a particularly strong grip on belief and culture. Along the way she gathers the ectoplasmic residues seeping from books and film reels, from the Gothic novel The Castle of Otranto to the 2007 blockbuster Paranormal Activity, from the stories of Ann Radcliffe to those of Stephen King. Wide-ranging, informative, and slicked with over fifty unearthly images, Ghosts is an entertaining read of a cultural phenomenon that will delight anyone, whether they believe in ghosts or not.