Psychological ghost story: Difference between revisions

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* [[Robert Aickman]]
* [[Robert Aickman]]
* [[Walter De La Mare]]
* [[Walter De La Mare]]
* '''[[Olivia Howard Dunbar]]'''
* '''[[L.P. Hartley]]'''
* '''[[L.P. Hartley]]'''
* '''[[Violet Hunt]]'''
* '''[[Violet Hunt]]'''
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* '''[[Shirley Jackson]]'''
* '''[[Shirley Jackson]]'''
* '''[[Sarah Waters]], ''[[Affinity]]'''''
* '''[[Sarah Waters]], ''[[Affinity]]'''''
==Further reading==
* [[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==

Revision as of 16:21, 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

See also