Visions of an Unseen World:

Ghost Beliefs and Ghost Stories in Eighteenth-Century England


Sasha Handley


Religious Cultures in the Early Modern World
Hb: 304pp: 2007
978 1 85196 888 6: 216x138mm: £60.00/$99.00

This book describes the haunting of eighteenth-century England. It is the first in-depth study of the production, circulation and consumption of English ghost stories during the Age of Reason.

Handley combines close textual analysis with a broad conception of historical change. In so doing, she shows how ghost stories reveal some of the underlying concerns and conflicts of eighteenth-century life. She examines a variety of media: ballads and chapbooks, newspapers, sermons, medical treatises and scientific journals, novels and plays. Through these, Handley relates the telling of ghost stories to wider changes associated with the Enlightenment, arguing that they played a key role in battles against atheism, material excess and secularisation. She also links ghost stories to broader cultural trends such as Romanticism and gothic fictions.

Sample pages

Readership

Eighteenth-Century Studies, Gothic Studies, Religious Studies, Print Culture

Contents

Introduction: The Ghosts of Early Modern England
Chapter 1: Restoration Hauntings
Chapter 2: Printing the Preternatural in the Late Seventeenth Century
Chapter 3: A New Canterbury Tale
Chapter 4: Ghost Stories in the Periodical Press, c.1700 – c.1750
Chapter 5: Confessional Cultures and Ghost Beliefs, c.1750 – c.1800
Chapter 6: Landscapes of Belief and Everyday Life in Late Eighteenth-Century England
Conclusion

Related titles

decided

Return to top

Pickering & Chatto