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Jack Graham

Jack Graham writes and podcasts about culture and politics from a Gothic Marxist-Humanist perspective. He co-hosts the I Don't Speak German podcast with Daniel Harper. Support Jack on Patreon.

2 Comments

  1. Scurra
    October 16, 2024 @ 7:25 pm

    Delightful. I have long considered that it was the Protestant Reformation that enabled the church in England to survive at all as it was rapidly losing social control, and the idea that the rise of ghost stories may have been a side-effect of this is enticing. (My own church can trace its roots to one of the original ‘dissenting congregations’ back in 1650 or so, but the more you investigate, the weirder that particular trouser-leg of history gets!)

    I might note separately that as a librarian, the drive to “describe reality using categories” is hard to resist, even though we are horribly (ha) aware that the idea of classification is inherently ridiculous and are thus probably more aware of the blurry boundaries than most.

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  2. Laurence Price
    October 21, 2024 @ 6:10 pm

    Fascinating! I’m really looking forward to more on this.

    One thought- The Reformation, in particular because of increased literacy and the widespread possession of vernacular Bible translations, would have given people access to one of the world’s oldest ghost stories: the wonderfully eerie story of Saul and the Witch of Endor in 1 Samuel. Its attitude to ghosts is fascinatingly ambivalent- ghosts are real and can be conjured, but this is punishable by death. It’s a passage that would probably rarely be read audibly in pre Reformation Catholic liturgies- and of course it would be in Latin. But for post-reformation Protestants following Cranmer’s plan to read through the whole Bible systematically, this story would have been read out loud in English at least once a year. So from the mid sixteenth century, at least once biblical ghost story would have have been regularly heard and understood in people’s homes and churches… Maybe that’s just another little piece in the jigsaw of why ghost stories started to flourish in the 17th century?

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