Langbahn Team – Weltmeisterschaft

Spiritualism in fiction

This article provides a selected list of fictional stories in which Spiritualism features as an important plot element. The list omits passing mentions.

Written works

  • Nathaniel Hawthorne, The Blithedale Romance (1852). Through the legend of the clairvoyant "veiled lady" (who later turns out to be real), the stagecraft and duplicity of Spiritualism is contrasted with the failed Utopian ideals of the Blithedale community.[1][2]
  • Robert Browning, Mr Sludge, "The Medium", narrative poem, first published in Dramatis Personae (1864). Mr Sludge was based on the American medium Daniel Home.[3]
  • William Dean Howells, The Undiscovered Country, an 1880 novel on Spiritualism and its dangers for the mental stability of its fanatical adherents.[4]
  • Henry James, The Bostonians (1886), whose heroine is viewed as having fallen under the spell of female trance lecturers such as Mrs. Ada T.P. Foat, modeled on the real-life Cora L. V. Scott. The novel illustrates how Spiritualism was adopted by persons involved in late-19th-century reform movements.[5]
  • Bolesław Prus, Pharaoh, an 1895 historical novel incorporating scenes inspired by Spiritualism.[6]
  • H. G. Wells, Love and Mr. Lewisham, a novel published in 1900, in which the main character falls in love with a girl whose stepfather claims to be a spirit medium. A large portion of the novel deals with the questionable ethics of some practitioners of the occult. (This novel marked one of the earliest departures from science fiction for Wells—and was a best-seller.)[7]
  • Hamlin Garland, Tyranny of the Dark, a 1905 novel which follows the budding romance between a skeptical man of science and a beautiful young spirit medium. (Much of the novel's material was based on the author's actual investigations.)[8]
  • Arthur Conan Doyle, The Land of Mist, a novel published in 1926. The third of Doyle's Professor Challenger stories, The Land of Mist deals with the conversion to Spiritualism of Challenger's friend Edward Malone, his daughter Enid, and finally Challenger himself. Doyle was a committed Spiritualist, and this book's presentation of Spiritualist ideals is somewhat more earnest than that in most books of its type, while the descriptions of séance phenomena are substantially more pedantic.[9]
  • Agatha Christie first wrote about spiritualism in her short story The Last Seance (1926), and revisited the subject in The Sittaford Mystery (1931), Peril at End House (1932), Dumb Witness (1937) and The Pale Horse (1962).[10]
  • Dorothy L Sayers, Strong Poison (1930), in which Miss Climpson acts the part of a fake medium to obtain information from a suspect.[11]
  • George S. Kaufman, Moss Hart, You Can't Take It with You, a play which premiered on Broadway in 1936, where one of the characters, Mrs. Kirby, believes in Spiritualism.
  • Noël Coward, Blithe Spirit (1941), a comic play about a novelist who researches the occult and hires a medium. A séance brings back the ghost of his first wife, causing havoc for the novelist and his second wife.[12]
  • Gladys Mitchell, When I Last Died (1941), an investigation of a trio of murders that take place in a house full of poltergeists.[13]
  • H.D. Majic Ring. Written in 1943–4 as "Delia Alton", not published until 2009. Fictionalises H.D's early involvement with Lord Hugh Dowding and the "majic ring" of Spiritualism.[14]
  • William Lindsay Gresham, Nightmare Alley (1946) about a carnival where the mentalist Zeena develops a "code" act, where performers memorize verbal cues that allow them to appear psychic by accurately answering written audience questions. Her pupil Stan transforms himself into Reverend Carlisle, an upstanding Spiritualist preacher offering séance sessions.
  • Muriel Spark, The Bachelors, a 1960 novel that follows the factions of a Spiritualist group opposing and supporting a fraudulent medium.[15]
  • A. S. Byatt, Possession: A Romance. In the Victorian half of this 1990 novel, many preoccupations of the time are discussed and experienced by the characters. Spiritualism is treated as a fraud on the credulous.[16]
  • Sarah Waters, Affinity (1999): This historical novel is about a depressed young woman in turn-of-the-century England. She is depressed because she had been having a lesbian affair with a friend, who decided to cut off their relations and marry a man. In an effort to lift her depression, she volunteers at a women's prison, where she meets a beautiful young Spiritualist, Selena Dawes, to whom she feels romantically attracted. The protagonist learns about Spiritualism as she falls deeper in love with Selena.[17]
  • Hilary Mantel. Beyond Black (2005). The book's central character is a medium named Alison Hart who, along with her assistant/business partner/manager, Colette, takes her one-woman psychic show on the road, travelling to venues around the Home Counties, and providing her audience with a point of contact between this world and the next.
  • Dianne K. Salerni. We Hear the Dead (2010). Historical novel about the Fox sisters, credited with launching spiritualism, only for one of them to admit later that it was all a delusion.[18]
  • Michelle Black, Sèance in Sepia (2011): In this mystery novel, real-life spiritualist Victoria Woodhull investigates the world of spirit photography and ends up solving a murder mystery in 1875 Chicago.[19]

Movies

Television

Further reading

  • Owen, Alex. The Darkened Room: Women, Power, and Spiritualism in Late Victorian England (2004)

References

  1. ^ Young, Adrian van. 'Why Spiritualism Persists in our Fictions and Culture', from Literary Hub
  2. ^ Sloan, Elizabeth. The Treatment of the Supernatural in Poe and Hawthorne. Ithaca: Cornell, 1930.
  3. ^ Armstrong, Isobel (1964). "Browning's Mr. Sludge, "The Medium"". Victorian Poetry. 2 (1): 1–9. JSTOR 40001240.
  4. ^ Vanderbilt, Kermit (1965). ""The Undiscovered Country": Howells' Version of American Pastoral". American Quarterly. 17 (4): 634–655. doi:10.2307/2711124. JSTOR 2711124.
  5. ^ Wolstenholme, Susan. 'Possession and Personality: Spiritualism in The Bostonians', in American Literature, Vol. 49, No. 4 (Jan. 1978), pp. 580-591
  6. ^ Christopher Kasparek, "Prus' Pharaoh: Primer on Power", pp. 332-33.
  7. ^ 'Wells Explores the World of Spirits'. H G Wells, in New York Times Magazine, 25 December 1927
  8. ^ 'A Story of Psychic Mystery', New York Times review, 27 May 1905, p 23
  9. ^ 'Sir Arthur Conan Doyle and Victorian Spiritualism', from The Victorian Web
  10. ^ Redmond, Moira. 'Is anybody there? The creepiest seance stories to read this Halloween', The Guardian, 31 October, 2016
  11. ^ Willis, Chris. Making the Dead Speak: Spiritualism and Detective Fiction (2000)
  12. ^ Gardner, Lyn. 'Blithe Spirit and theatre as seance: the lasting appeal of spiritualism on stage', in The Guardian, 4 March 2014
  13. ^ Gladysmitchell.com
  14. ^ Sword, Helen (1995). "H. D.'s Majic Ring". Tulsa Studies in Women's Literature. 14 (2): 347–362. doi:10.2307/463904. JSTOR 463904.
  15. ^ Baldanza, Frank (1965). "Muriel Spark and the Occult". Wisconsin Studies in Contemporary Literature. 6 (2): 190–203. doi:10.2307/1207258. JSTOR 1207258.
  16. ^ Johnson, Jennifer Anne. 'Beyond belief : the crisis of faith in A.S. Byatt's fiction' in Journal of English Studies, Vol 10 (2012)
  17. ^ Kontou, Tatiana (2009). "Queering the Séance: Sarah Waters' Affinity". Spiritualism and Women's Writing. pp. 172–198. doi:10.1057/9780230240797_7. ISBN 978-1-349-29915-7.
  18. ^ Review at Librarything
  19. ^ Black, Michelle, Sèance in Sepia. Five Star. ISBN 978-1432825485.