“Towns that go bump in the night”: haunted urbanity and ghostly narratives in the UK
“Towns that go bump in the night”: haunted urbanity and ghostly narratives in the UK
Most if not all towns and cities in the UK have at least one haunted landmark, often several. Locations ranging from Southampton to York to Cardiff, for example, are host to a wide range of venues and locations, from industrial estates to haunted theatres, all said to be host to spectral presences of one sort or another. It is fair to say, then, that paranormal urban landscapes loom large in British culture and its urban experience. Given the sheer number of these occurrences, what does this reveal about how we relate to our towns and cities? Do our large number of haunted cities and towns reflect an ongoing narrative tradition in our popular culture, or do haunted sites instead reflect a sense of alienation and disillusionment with our surroundings, be it in the form of shuttered pubs, the London Underground, or the nondescript environs of a semi-detached house with its own poltergeist? Other areas of interest in this paper include how press coverage both reflects and disseminate urban ghost narratives, alongside the rise of housing inequalities and entrenched poverty that increasingly define British towns and cities. Whether these urban ghosts exist, of course, is another matter.
59-83
Hay, Alexander
ff494524-3d12-4389-ad51-3fa88c56437b
5 October 2020
Hay, Alexander
ff494524-3d12-4389-ad51-3fa88c56437b
Hay, Alexander
(2020)
“Towns that go bump in the night”: haunted urbanity and ghostly narratives in the UK.
Supernatural Studies: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Art, Media, and Culture, 6 (2), .
Abstract
Most if not all towns and cities in the UK have at least one haunted landmark, often several. Locations ranging from Southampton to York to Cardiff, for example, are host to a wide range of venues and locations, from industrial estates to haunted theatres, all said to be host to spectral presences of one sort or another. It is fair to say, then, that paranormal urban landscapes loom large in British culture and its urban experience. Given the sheer number of these occurrences, what does this reveal about how we relate to our towns and cities? Do our large number of haunted cities and towns reflect an ongoing narrative tradition in our popular culture, or do haunted sites instead reflect a sense of alienation and disillusionment with our surroundings, be it in the form of shuttered pubs, the London Underground, or the nondescript environs of a semi-detached house with its own poltergeist? Other areas of interest in this paper include how press coverage both reflects and disseminate urban ghost narratives, alongside the rise of housing inequalities and entrenched poverty that increasingly define British towns and cities. Whether these urban ghosts exist, of course, is another matter.
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Published date: 5 October 2020
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Local EPrints ID: 444468
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/444468
ISSN: 2470-203X
PURE UUID: c4a3080c-af76-4abf-a1b9-13280b49018f
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Date deposited: 20 Oct 2020 16:32
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 09:36
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Author:
Alexander Hay
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