This book provides an exciting and informed overview of new, emerging, and radical approaches to the long ghost story tradition. Interrogating established canons and recurring modes of ghost story analysis, New Directions explores where academic criticism of the genre stands today, and where it might be heading next. The first substantial project of its kind in the field, this two-volume set consists of thirty-three essays presented across two volumes, and presents fresh explorations of the forms, histories, meanings, and media of the ghost story. Volume 1 is comprised of seventeen chapters organised around two areas of enquiry: Part I: Tradition, Theory and Genre and Part II: Space, Place, and the Ecospectral.
Chapter 1: At the Borderlands: A Haunted Introduction.- Part I:
Tradition, Theory, Genre: New Directions.
Chapter 2: Endless Time:
Hauntology in Philippa Pearces Toms Midnight Garden.
Chapter 3: Literary
Geography and the Ghost Story: Haunting, Narrative, and Spatiality in Lucy M.
Bostons The Children of Green Knowe .- Spectral Sounds: Ghost Stories on
Audio Media.
Chapter 5: Unexpected Spectres: Shirley Jacksons Hangsaman as
Ghost Story.
Chapter 6: Hauntography: Object-Oriented Ontology and the Ghost
Story.
Chapter 7: All That Solid Flesh Melts into Air: The Communist
Manifesto as Proletarian Ghost Story.
Chapter 8: The Ghost Story in Latin
American Neo-fantastic Literature: Francisco Tario and Aureola o alvéolo.-
Chapter 9: Something to Share?: Ridiculous Society in BBC's Ghosts Andrew
McInnes.- Part II: Space, Place, and the Ecospectral.
Chapter 10: uburban
Spirits: G. W. M. Reynoldss The Mysteries of London and the Victorian
Haunted-House.
Chapter 11: The Spectral Class: Female Servants in Victorian
Ghost Stories Colleen.
Chapter 12: It Is In Our House Now: Twin Peaks as
Televisual Ghost Story.
Chapter 13: The Everyday Ghosts of Interwar
England Nick Freeman.
Chapter 14: Graeco-Roman Haunted Sites: Dark Tourism
in the Ancient.
Chapter 15: Ghost Gear and Cetacean Bodies: Stories of
Spectral and Material Entanglement in the Necrocen.
Henry Bartholomew is a Lecturer at the Global Banking School, Birmingham. His work explores the ghost story, the Gothic, and weird fiction, and he has edited three story anthologies in these areas. His latest project is a special issue of Gothic Studies on the author Algernon Blackwood.
Joan Passey is a Lecturer in English at the University of Bristol, UK, and an AHRC/BBC New Generation Thinker. She specialises in representations of coasts and seascapes in literature and culture, especially the Gothic. She regularly appears on BBC Radio 3 and has edited anthologies with the British Library.
Jen Baker is a Lecturer in Literature at the University of Warwick, UK. She is the editor of Minor Hauntings: Chilling Tales of Spectral Youth (British Library, 2021). She is working on her first monograph on haunting expression and spectral embodiments of child death in the long nineteenth century.