Psychological ghost story: Difference between revisions

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Perhaps one of the most famous examples is [[Charlotte Perkins Gilman]]'s ''[[The Yellow Wallpaper]]'' (1892).  
Perhaps one of the most famous examples is [[Charlotte Perkins Gilman]]'s ''[[The Yellow Wallpaper]]'' (1892).  


Other examples and writers include:
Other examples and writers include (women in bold):
* [[Charles Dickens]], ''[[The Signalman]]'' (1866)
* [[Charles Dickens]], ''[[The Signalman]]'' (1866)
* [[Charlotte Perkins Gilman]]'s ''[[The Yellow Wallpaper]]'' (1892)
* '''[[Charlotte Perkins Gilman]]'s ''[[The Yellow Wallpaper]]''''' (1892)
* [[Henry James]], ''[[The Turn of the Screw]]'' (1898)
* [[Henry James]], ''[[The Turn of the Screw]]'' (1898)
* [[Oliver Onions]], ''[[The Beckoning Fair One]]'' [http://www.english.upenn.edu/~nauerbac/onions.html]
* [[Oliver Onions]], ''[[The Beckoning Fair One]]'' (1911) [http://www.english.upenn.edu/~nauerbac/onions.html]
* [[Robert Aickman]]
* [[Walter De La Mare]]
* '''[[Olivia Howard Dunbar]]'''
* '''[[L.P. Hartley]]'''
* '''[[Violet Hunt]]'''
* '''[[Vernon Lee]]'''
* '''[[Edith Wharton]]'''




Other examples:
; Modern examples / practitioners
uthors include Henry James, Oliver Onions, Walter De La Mare, Edith Wharton, L.P. Hartley, Vernon Lee, Violet Hunt, and Robert Aickman. Examples include Henry James' The Turn of the Screw, Oliver Onions' The Beckoning Fair One, Charlotte Perkins Gilman's The Yellow Wallpaper, and Vernon Lee's Amour Dure. Charles Dickens' The Signalman is not
* '''[[Daphne Du Maurier]]'''
* '''[[M. K. Hobson]]''' ("Oaks Park")
* '''[[Shirley Jackson]], ''[[The Haunting of Hill House]]'''''
* '''[[Joyce Carol Oates]]'''
* '''[[Kit Reed]]''' ("Akbar")
* '''[[Ekaterina Sedia]]''' ("Tin Cans")
* '''[[Carolyn Turgeon]]''' ("La Llorona")
* '''[[Sarah Waters]], ''[[Affinity]]'''''
 
==Further reading==
* [[Ted Billy]], "'Domesticated with the Horror': Matrimonial Mansions in Edith Wharton's Psychological Ghost Stories", ''Journal of American & Comparative Cultures'', Volume 25, Issue 3-4, pages 433–437, September 2002 ([http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1542-734X.00062/abstract full-text for sale from publisher])
 
* [[Jessica Amanda Salmonson]], [http://www.violetbooks.com/dunbar.html "The Psychological Ghost Stories of Olivia Howard Dunbar"] (abridged introduction to ''[[The Shell of Sense]]'', a collection of Dunbar's short stories)


==See also==
==See also==
* [[Ghost story]]
* [[Ghost story]]
* [[Gothic]]
* [[Supernatural fiction]]
* [[Supernatural fiction]]
* [[Women and madness in SF]]
* [[Women and madness in SF]]


[[category:Genres]]
[[category:Genres]]

Latest revision as of 17:03, 22 December 2010

The psychological ghost story is a type of ghost story which is particularly told from the protagonist's point of view, and in a way that suggests the protagonist may be an unreliable narrator -- mad or deluded.

Perhaps one of the most famous examples is Charlotte Perkins Gilman's The Yellow Wallpaper (1892).

Other examples and writers include (women in bold):


Modern examples / practitioners

Further reading

  • Ted Billy, "'Domesticated with the Horror': Matrimonial Mansions in Edith Wharton's Psychological Ghost Stories", Journal of American & Comparative Cultures, Volume 25, Issue 3-4, pages 433–437, September 2002 (full-text for sale from publisher)

See also