Women and the Victorian Occult

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annie
audley
audleys
Automatic Writing
automatic writing research
besant
British Museum Reading Room
Bronze Buddha
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esoteric feminism
Female Preacher
florence
Florence Marryat
ghost
Holden Daughters
Holden Women
Kate Mattacks
Katie King
Labour Church
lady
Lady Audley
Lady Audley's Secret
Lady Audley’s Secret
Late Victorian Gothic
Lunatic Fringe
marryat
mesmerism and trance states
Mrs Henry Wood
nineteenth-century gender roles
Occult Body
Occult Women
Original Publishing Context
secret
Sensation Fiction
sensation fiction analysis
spiritualism studies
stories
Tatiana Kontou
Trance Medium
Vampire Bat
Vengeful Ghosts
Victorian Occultism
Victorian women's supernatural agency
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415613262
  • Weight: 420g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 14 Dec 2010
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Increasingly, contemporary scholarship reveals the strong connection between Victorian women and the world of the nineteenth-century supernatural. Women were intrinsically bound to the occult and the esoteric from mediums who materialised spirits to the epiphanic experiences of the New Woman, from theosophy to telepathy. This volume addresses the various ways in which Victorian women expressed themselves and were constructed by the occult through a broad range of texts. By examining the roles of women as automatic writing mediums, spiritualists, authors, editors, theosophists, socialists and how they interpreted the occult in their life and work, the contributors in this edition return to sensation novels, ghost stories, autobiographies, séances and fashionable magazines to access the visible and invisible worlds of Victorian life. The variety of texts analysed by the authors in this collection demonstrates the many interpretations of the occult in nineteenth-century culture and the ways that women used supernatural imagery and language to draw attention to issues that bore immediate implications on their own lives. Either by catering for the fad of ghost stories or by giving public trance speeches women harnessed the metaphorical and financial forces of the supernatural. As the articles in this book demonstrate the occult was after all a female affair. This book was published as a special issue of Women's Writing.

Tatiana Kontou is the author of Spiritualism and Women’s Writing: from the fin de siècle to the neo-Victorian and co-editor with Sarah Willburn of The Ashgate Research Companion to Nineteenth-Century Spiritualism and the Occult. She is currently writing a monograph on Florence Marryat for Edinburgh University Press.