Introduction; Part I. The Dreams of the Ghost-Seers: 1. The haunted mind, 1750–1850; 2. Seeing is believing?: Ghost-seeing and hallucinatory experience; Part II. A Science of the Soul: 3. Ghost-hunting in the Society for Psychical Research; 4. Phantasms of the living and the dead; 5. The concept of hallucination in late-Victorian psychology; Epilogue: towards 1920; Appendix; Bibliography.
Examines the culture of ghost-seeing, arguing that the ghost represents a symbol of the psychological hauntedness of modern experience.
Shane McCorristine is a post-doctoral researcher in the Humanities Institute of Ireland, University College Dublin. He has previously published articles on surrealism, children's literature and supernatural fiction.
'New research is revealing the origins of England's reputation as a
land of ghosts.' BBC History Magazine
'Ghosts have been seen, and in so many ways. They have been seen as
evidence of an afterlife, of insanity, of telepathy. They have been
seen as unusual and common illustrations of the unreliability of
the normal mind, as the causes of belief and as the product of
belief. And what this book shows is that they can be seen as a
useful reminder of the need to address what is meant by real,
before considering whether anything is real … as in all good
cultural histories, Spectres of the Self draws a rich web of
connections, provides subtle insights, and reveals the degree of
complexity which lies behind the simple questions.' English
Historical Review
'The historical research presented in the book details the works,
debates, and criticisms of the SPR and will not only interest the
informed readership, but also a more general one. [This book]
presents enthralling and laborious scholarship. But more
importantly, it will inspire future researchers to work on this
previously unmapped terrain of the supernatural.' Irmak
Ertuna-Howison, Canadian Journal of History
'McCorristine deftly contextualises the specifics of the SPR's
methods and internal disagreements with the broader cultural
history of Victorian death rituals and perceptions of the
afterlife, thus demonstrating a breadth of analytical scope that
offers insightful information for both the general and the
scholarly reader. Spectres of the Self is a valuable addition to
the growing canon on the cultural history of ghost-seeing and is
highly recommended to anyone interested in the history, literature,
and cultural mindset of Europe in the 1750s to 1920s.' Kirsten
Møllegaard, Folklore
'Spectres of the Self offers a fresh perspective on how we should
read the relationship between ghost stories and modern
subjectivities. McCorristine's book will undoubtedly prove to be a
valuable resource for scholars and students with an interest in
supernatural beliefs and more broadly in the sociocultural and
intellectual history of contemporary Europe.' Sasha Handley,
Journal of British Studies
'The book is a welcome and necessary contribution to the field -
necessary because, while it covers some trodden ground, it does so
with a thoroughness lacking in much other scholarship …
McCorristine's book, for its wealth of information and strength of
research, should be required reading in any course on the Victorian
supernatural, especially if the course has anything to do with
ghosts.' Srdjan Smajic, Victorian Studies
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