Ghostly Encounters: Cultural and Imaginary Representations of the Spectral from the Nineteenth Century to the Present, edited by Stefano Cracolici and Mark Sandy

Cover of Ghostly Encounters

From the publisher's website: This volume reflects on the ghostly and its varied manifestations including the uncanny, the revenant, the echo, and other forms of artistic allusion. These unsettling presences of the spectral other occur in literature, history, film, and art. The ghostly (and its artistic, literary, filmic, and cultural representations) remains of burgeoning interest and debate to twenty-first century literary critics, cultural historians, art historians, and linguists. Our collection of essays considers the wider implications of these representations of the ghostly and notions of the spectral to define a series of different, but inter-related, cultural topics (concerned with questions of ageing, the uncanny, the spectral, spiritualism, eschatology), which imaginatively testify to our compulsion to search for evidence of the ghostly in our everyday encounters with the material world.

Further information at the publisher's website: Routledge.

Review by Tim Prasil.

Publication Details
Routledge, ISBN: 9780367677015
Publish date
Book Review
Ghostly Encounters: Cultural and Imaginary Representations of the Spectral from the Nineteenth Century to the Present, edited by Stefano Cracolici and Mark Sandy