Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-25wd4 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-27T14:27:38.374Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Bibliography

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 August 2012

Shane McCorristine
Affiliation:
Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität Munchen
Get access

Summary

Image of the first page of this content. For PDF version, please use the ‘Save PDF’ preceeding this image.'
Type
Chapter
Information
Spectres of the Self
Thinking about Ghosts and Ghost-Seeing in England, 1750–1920
, pp. 244 - 270
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2010

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Abraham, Nicolas, ‘Notes on the Phantom: A Complement to Freud's Metapsychology’, trans. Rand, Nicholas, Critical Inquiry 13:2 (1987), 287–92.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Adair, Patricia, The Waking Dream: A Study of Coleridge's Poetry (London, 1967).Google Scholar
,‘After Twelve Years’, Light: A Journal Devoted to the Highest Interests of Humanity, Both Here and Hereafter (1881–1883); Light: A Journal of Psychical, Occult, and Mystical Research (1883–) 14 (27 January 1894), 42.
Alderson, John, An Essay on Apparitions, in Which Their Appearance Is Accounted for by Causes Wholly Independent of Preternatural Agency (London, 1823).Google Scholar
,‘Alif’, ‘Religion and Schopenhauer’, Light: A Journal Devoted to the Highest Interests of Humanity, Both Here and Hereafter (1881–1883); Light: A Journal of Psychical, Occult, and Mystical Research (1883–) 12 (7 May 1892), 221.
Allen, Grant, Strange Stories (London, 1884).Google Scholar
Althusser, Louis, Writings on Psychoanalysis: Freud and Lacan, trans. Jeffrey, Mehlman (New York, 1996).Google Scholar
Alvarado, Carlos S., ‘Dissociation in Britain During the Late Nineteenth Century: The Society for Psychical Research, 1882–1900’, Journal of Trauma & Dissociation 3:2 (2002), 9–33.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Alvarado, Carlos S.‘On the Centenary of Frederic W.H. Myers's Human Personality and Its Survival of Bodily Death’, Journal of Parapsychology 68 (2004), 3–43.Google Scholar
Alvarado, Carlos S.‘Psychical Research and Telepathy in Nineteenth-Century Issues of The Times’, Paranormal Review 43 (2007), 3–7.Google Scholar
,American Psychiatric Association, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 4th edn, DSM-IV-TR (Washington, DC, 2000).
Amm, Marita, ‘Might and Magic, Lust and Language – The Eye as a Metaphor in Literature: Notes on the Hierarchy of the Senses’, Documenta Ophthalmologica 101:3 (2000), 223–32.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Andrews, Malcolm, Charles Dickens and His Performing Selves: Dickens and the Public Readings (Oxford, 2006).Google Scholar
Andriopoulos, Stefan, ‘Psychic Television’, Critical Inquiry 31:3 (2005), 618–37.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ariès, Philippe, The Hour of Our Death, trans. Helen, Weaver (London, 1983).Google Scholar
Armstrong, Tim, Modernism: A Cultural History (Cambridge, 2005).Google Scholar
Armstrong-Jones, Robert, ‘Dreams and Their Interpretation, with Special Application to Freudism’, Journal of Mental Science 63 (1917), 200–25.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Assier, Adolphe d', Posthumous Humanity: A Study of Phantoms, trans. Henry, S. Olcott (London, 1887).Google Scholar
Auerbach, Nina, Private Theatricals: The Lives of the Victorians (Cambridge, MA, and London, 1990).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bacorski, Hans-Jürgen, ‘Dreams That Have Never Been Dreamt at All: Interpreting Dreams in Medieval Literature’, trans. Pamela, E. Selwyn, History Workshop Journal 49 (2000), 95–127.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ballou, Adin, An Exposition of Views Respecting the Modern Spirit Manifestations: Together with Phenomenal Statements and Communications (Liverpool, 1853).Google Scholar
Barkhoff, Jürgen, Magnetische Fiktionen: Literarisierung des Mesmerismus in der Romantik (Stuttgart, 1995).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barrett, William F., Death-bed Visions: The Psychical Experiences of the Dying (Wellingborough, 1986).Google Scholar
Barrett, William F.‘An Early Psychical Research Society’, Journal of the Society for Psychical Research 21 (1923–1924), 67–71.Google Scholar
Barrett, William F.On the Threshold of the Unseen: An Examination of the Phenomena of Spiritualism and of the Evidence for Survival after Death (London, 1917).Google Scholar
Barrett, William F., Edmund, Gurney and Frederic, W.H. Myers. ‘First Report of the Committee on Thought-reading’, Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research 1 (1882–1883), 13–34.Google Scholar
Barrett, William F.‘Thought-reading’, Nineteenth Century 11 (1882), 890–901.Google Scholar
Barrett, William F., Edmund Gurney, , Frederic, W.H. Myerset al., ‘First Report of the Committee on Mesmerism’, Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research 1 (1882–1883), 217–29.Google Scholar
Barrett, William F., Perceval, A.P.Keep, C.C. Masseyet al., ‘First Report of the Committee on Haunted Houses’, Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research 1 (1882–1883), 101–15.Google Scholar
Barrett, William F., Massey, C.C., Moses, W. Staintonet al., ‘First Report of the Literary Committee’, Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research 1 (1882–1883), 116–55.Google Scholar
Barrett, William F., Massey, C.C., Moses, W. Staintonet al., ‘Second Report of the Literary Committee’, Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research 2 (1884), 43–55.Google Scholar
Barrett, William F., Massey, C.C., Moses, W. Staintonet al., ‘Third Report of the Literary Committee: A Theory of Apparitions. Part I’, Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research 2 (1884), 109–36.Google Scholar
Barrett, William F., Massey, C.C., Moses, W. Staintonet al., ‘Fourth Report of the Literary Committee: A Theory of Apparitions. Part II’, Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research 2 (1884), 157–86.Google Scholar
Barrow, Logie, Independent Spirits: Spiritualism and English Plebeians, 1850–1910 (London, 1986).Google Scholar
Barthes, Roland, ‘Textual Analysis: Poe's “Valdemar” ’, in Modern Criticism and Theory: A Reader, ed. David, Lodge, 2nd edn (Harlow, 2000), pp.172–95.Google Scholar
Bartlett, Robert, The Natural and the Supernatural in the Middle Ages (Cambridge, 2008).Google Scholar
Basham, Diana, The Trial of Woman: Feminism and the Occult Sciences in Victorian Literature and Society (Basingstoke, 1992).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bath, Jo and Newton, John, ‘ “Sensible Proof of Spirits”: Ghost Belief during the Later Seventeenth Century’, Folklore 117:1 (2006), 1–14.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Baudelaire, Charles, Œuvres complètes II (Paris, 1999).Google Scholar
Bayfield, M.A., Rev., ‘Andrew Lang and Psychical Research’, Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research 26 (1912–1913), 419–30.Google Scholar
Beard, George M., ‘The Psychology of Spiritism’, North American Review 129 (1879), 65–81.Google Scholar
Beer, John, Post-Romantic Consciousness: Dickens to Plath (Basingstoke, 2003).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bell, Matthew, The German Tradition of Psychology in Literature and Thought, 1700–1840 (Cambridge, 2005).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bell, Robert, ‘Stranger than Fiction’, Cornhill Magazine 2 (1860), 211–24.Google Scholar
Bennett, Bridget, ed., Women, Madness and Spiritualism: vol. II, Susan Willis Fletcher (London and New York, 2003).Google Scholar
Bennett, Gillian, ‘Ghost and Witch in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries’, Folklore 97:1 (1986), 3–14.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bennett, GillianTraditions of Belief: Women and the Supernatural (Harmondsworth, 1987).Google Scholar
Bentall, R.P., ‘The Illusion of Reality: A Review and Integration of Psychological Research on Hallucinations’, Psychological Bulletin 107:1 (1990), 82–95.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bergson, Henri, Creative Evolution, trans. Mitchell, Arthur (Lanham, 1984).Google Scholar
Bergson, HenriMind-Energy: Lectures and Essays, trans. Wildon Carr, H. (London, 1921).Google Scholar
Berrios, German E., ‘Historical Background to Abnormal Psychology’, in Adult Abnormal Psychology, ed. Edgar, Miller and Peter, J. Cooper (Edinburgh, 1988), pp.26–51.Google Scholar
Berrios, German E.The History of Mental Symptoms: Descriptive Psychopathology since the Nineteenth Century (Cambridge, 1998).Google Scholar
Berrios, German E.‘On the Fantastic Apparitions of Vision by Johannes Müller’, History of Psychiatry 16:2 (2005), 229–46.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Berrios, German E.‘Tactile Hallucinations: Conceptual and Historical Aspects’, Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry 45:4 (1982), 285–93.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Berrios, German E. and Gil, M., ‘Will and Its Disorders: A Conceptual History’, History of Psychiatry 6:21 (1995), 87–104.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Beyer, Jürgen, ‘On the Transformation of Apparition Stories in Scandinavia and Germany, c.1350–1700’, Folklore 110 (1999), 39–47.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bierce, Ambrose, The Devil's Dictionary (London, 2003).Google Scholar
Binet, Alfred, ‘Visual Hallucinations in Hypnotism’, Mind 9:35 (1884), 413–15.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Blum, Deborah, Ghost Hunters: William James and the Search for Scientific Proof of Life after Death (London, 2007).Google Scholar
Boakes, Robert, From Darwin to Behaviourism: Psychology and the Minds of Animals (Cambridge, 1984).Google Scholar
Böhme, Hartmut and Böhme, Gernot, ‘The Battle of Reason with the Imagination’, trans. Jane Kneller, in What Is Enlightenment? Eighteenth-century Answers and Twentieth-century Questions, ed. James, Schmidt (Berkeley, Los Angeles and London, 1996), pp.426–52.Google Scholar
Bondeson, Jan, Buried Alive: The Terrifying History of Our Most Primal Fear (New York and London, 2001).Google Scholar
Boswell, James, The Life of Samuel Johnson, ed. Christopher, Hibbert (Harmondsworth, 1979).Google Scholar
Bowyer, Richard A., ‘The Role of the Ghost Story in Medieval Christianity’, in The Folklore of Ghosts, ed. Hilda, R. Ellis Davidson and Russell, W.M.S. (Cambridge, 1981), pp.177–92.Google Scholar
Brewster, David, Letters on Natural Magic, Addressed to Sir Walter Scott, Bart, 5th edn (London, 1842).Google Scholar
Brierre de Boismont, A., On Hallucinations: A History and Explanation of Apparitions, Visions, Dreams, Ecstasy, Magnetism, and Somnambulism (Philadelphia, 1853).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Briggs, Julia, Night Visitors: The Rise and Fall of the English Ghost Story (London, 1977).Google Scholar
Broad, C. D., Religion, Philosophy and Psychical Research (London, 1953).Google Scholar
Brontë, Charlotte, Jane Eyre, ed. Margaret, Smith (Oxford, 1980).Google Scholar
Brooke, John Hedley, Science and Religion: Some Historical Perspectives (Cambridge, 1991).Google Scholar
Brown, Alan Willard, The Metaphysical Society: Victorian Minds in Crisis, 1869–1880 (New York, 1947).Google Scholar
Brown, J.H., Spectropia; or, Surprising Spectral Illusions. Showing Ghosts Everywhere, and of any Colour (London, 1864).Google Scholar
Brown, Samuel, ‘Ghosts and Ghost-seers’, North British Review 9 (1848), 393–416.Google Scholar
Browne, E. Harold, An Exposition of the Thirty-nine Articles: Historical and Doctrinal, 6th edn (London, 1864).Google Scholar
Browning, Robert, Poetical Works, 1833–1864 (London, 1970).Google Scholar
Buchanan, Robert, The Origin and Nature of Ghosts, Demons, and Spectral Illusions (Manchester, 1840).Google Scholar
Burrow, J. W., Evolution and Society: A Study in Victorian Social Theory (Cambridge, 1966).Google Scholar
Burwick, Frederick, ‘Romantic Drama: From Optics to Illusion’, in Literature and Science: Theory & Practice, ed. Stuart, Peterfreund (Boston, MA, 1990), pp.167–208.Google Scholar
Buse, Peterand Andrew, Stott, eds, Ghosts: Deconstruction, Psychoanalysis, History (Basingstoke, 1999).CrossRef
Bush, George, Mesmer and Swedenborg: Or, the Relation of the Developments of Mesmerism to the Doctrines and Disclosures of Swedenborg, 2nd edn (New York, 1847).Google Scholar
Bushell, W.D., Hughes, F.S., Keep, A.P. Percevalet al., ‘Second Report of the Committee on Haunted Houses’, Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research 2 (1884), 137–51.Google Scholar
Calkins, Mary W., ‘Statistics of Dreams’, American Journal of Psychology 5:3 (1893), 311–43.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Canguilhem, Georges, The Normal and the Pathological (New York, 1989).Google Scholar
Caper, Robert, Immaterial Facts: Freud's Discovery of Psychic Reality and Klein's Development of His Work (London and New York, 2000).Google Scholar
Carlyle, Thomas, Sartor Resartus, ed. Kerry, McSweeney and Peter, Sabor (Oxford, 1987).Google Scholar
Carpenter, William B., Mesmerism, Spiritualism, &c., Historically & Scientifically Considered (London, 1877).Google Scholar
Carpenter, William B.Principles of Mental Physiology: With Their Applications to the Training and Discipline of the Mind, and the Study of Its Morbid Conditions, 6th edn (London, 1891).Google Scholar
Carrington, Hereward, Psychical Phenomena and the War, new edn (New York, 1920).Google Scholar
Carroy, Jacqueline, ‘Dreaming Scientists and Scientific Dreamers: Freud as a Reader of French Dream Literature’, Science in Context 19:1 (2006), 15–35.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carter, Margaret L., Specter or Delusion? The Supernatural in Gothic Fiction (Ann Arbor and London, 1987).Google Scholar
‘Case of Spectral Illusion from Suppressed Hemorrhöis’, Edinburgh Medical and Surgical Journal 26 (1826), 216.
Casey, Edward S., Imagining: A Phenomenological Study, 2nd edn (Bloomington, 2000).Google Scholar
Casseres, Benjamin, ‘Ghosts and Their Makers’, New York Times (10 June 1910), p.L. 13.
Cassirer, Ernst, Kant's Life and Thought, trans. James, Haden (New Haven and London, 1981).Google Scholar
Castle, Terry, The Female Thermometer: Eighteenth-century Culture and the Invention of the Uncanny (New York and Oxford, 1995).Google Scholar
Cavaliero, Glen, The Supernatural and English Fiction (Oxford, 1995).Google Scholar
‘The Census of Hallucinations’, Light: A Journal Devoted to the Highest Interests of Humanity, Both Here and Hereafter (1881–1883); Light: A Journal of Psychical, Occult, and Mystical Research (1883–) 14 (29 September 1894), 462.
Cerullo, John J., The Secularization of the Soul: Psychical Research in Modern Britain (Philadelphia, 1982).Google Scholar
Chadwick, Owen, The Secularization of the European Mind in the Nineteenth Century (Cambridge, 1975).Google Scholar
Chapman, William, Nocturnal Travels; or, Walks in the Night. Being an Account of Ghosts, Apparitions, Hobgoblins, and Monsters (London, 1828).Google Scholar
Christian, William A., Apparitions in Late Medieval and Renaissance Spain (Princeton, 1981).Google Scholar
‘Circular No. 1’, Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research 1 (1882–1883), 294–302.
Cixous, Hélène, ‘Fiction and Its Phantasms: A Reading of Freud's Das Unheimliche (The “Uncanny”)’, New Literary History 7:3 (1976), 525–48.Google Scholar
Clapton, G.T., ‘Baudelaire and Catherine Crowe’, Modern Language Review 25:3 (1930), 286–305.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Clark, Stuart, Vanities of the Eye: Vision in Early Modern European Culture (Oxford, 2007).Google Scholar
Classen, Constance, The Color of Angels: Cosmology, Gender and the Aesthetic Imagination (London and New York, 1998).Google Scholar
Clery, E.J., The Rise of Supernatural Fiction, 1762–1800 (Cambridge, 1995).Google Scholar
Cobbe, Frances Power, ‘Unconscious Cerebration: A Psychological Study’, Macmillan's Magazine 133 (1870), 24–37.Google Scholar
Coffey, Nicole, ‘ “Every Word of It Is True”: The Cultural Significance of the Victorian Ghost Story’, MA thesis, 2004, University of Manitoba.
Cole, Michael, Cultural Psychology: A Once and Future Discipline (Cambridge, MA, and London, 1996).Google Scholar
Coleridge, Samuel Taylor, Biographia Literaria: vol. II, ed. Shawcross, J. (London, 1965).Google Scholar
Coleridge, Samuel TaylorThe Friend: vol. I, ed. Barbara, E. Rooke (London, 1969).Google Scholar
Coleridge, Samuel TaylorThe Notebooks of Samuel Taylor Coleridge: vol. IV, 1819–1826, ed. Kathleen, Coburn and Merton, Christensen (London, 1990).Google Scholar
Collins, H.M. and Pinch, T. J., ‘The Construction of the Paranormal: Nothing Unscientific Is Happening’, in On the Margins of Science: The Social Construction of Rejected Knowledge, ed. Roy, Wallis (Keele, 1979), pp.237–70.Google Scholar
Comte, Auguste, System of Positive Polity: vol. IV (New York, 1969).Google Scholar
Connor, Steven, ‘CP: or, a Few Don'ts by a Cultural Phenomenologist’, Parallax 5:2 (1999), 17–31.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Connor, Steven‘The Machine in the Ghost: Spiritualism, Technology and the “Direct Voice” ’, in Ghosts: Deconstruction, Psychoanalysis, History, ed. Peter, Buse and Andrew, Stott (Basingstoke, 1999), pp.203–25.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Constantine, Stephen, ‘Introduction: Empire Migration and Imperial Harmony’, in Emigrants and Empire: British Settlement in the Dominions between the Wars, ed. Stephen, Constantine (Manchester and New York, 1990), pp.1–21.Google Scholar
‘Constitution and Rules’, Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research 1 (1882–1883), 331–6.
Cook, James W., The Arts of Deception: Playing with Fraud in the Age of Barnum (Cambridge, MA, 2001).Google Scholar
Coon, Deborah J., ‘Standardizing the Subject: Experimental Psychologists, Introspection, and the Quest for a Technoscientific Ideal’, Technology and Culture 34:4 (1993), 757–83.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Coon, Deborah J.‘Testing the Limits of Sense and Science: American Experimental Psychologists Combat Spiritualism, 1880–1920’, American Psychologist 42:7 (1992), 143–51.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
‘Correspondence’, Journal of the Society for Psychical Research 4 (1889–1890), 143–51.
Cottom, Daniel, Abyss of Reason: Cultural Movements, Revelations, and Betrayals (Oxford, 1991).Google Scholar
Courtney, William L., ‘The New Psychology’, Fortnightly Review 26 (1879), 318–28.Google Scholar
Cox, Michael and , R.A.Gilbert, , eds, Victorian Ghost Stories: An Oxford Anthology (Oxford, 1991).
Crary, Jonathan, Suspensions of Perception: Attention, Spectacle and Modern Culture (Cambridge, MA, and London, 2001).Google Scholar
Crary, JonathanTechniques of the Observer: On Vision and Modernity in the Nineteenth Century (Cambridge, MA, and London, 1990).Google Scholar
Crawley, A.E., The Idea of the Soul (London, 1909).Google Scholar
Crookall, Robert, The Next World – And the Next: Ghostly Garments (London, 1966).Google Scholar
Crookes, William, Researches in the Phenomena of Spiritualism (London, 1874).Google Scholar
Crosland, Newton, Apparitions: A New Theory (London, 1856).Google Scholar
Cross, W.R., The Burned-over District: The Social and Intellectual History of Enthusiastic Religion in Western New York, 1800–1850 (Ithaca, NY, 1950).Google Scholar
Crowe, Catherine, The Night Side of Nature; or, Ghosts and Ghost-seers (London, 1850).Google Scholar
Crowe, CatherineSpiritualism, and the Age We Live In (London, 1859).Google Scholar
Crowell, Eugene, Spiritualism and Insanity (Boston, MA, 1877).Google Scholar
Cruikshank, George, A Discovery Concerning Ghosts; with a Rap at the ‘Spirit-Rappers’ … Illustrated with Cuts (London, 1863).Google Scholar
Cumberland, Stuart, That Other World: Personal Experiences of Mystics and Their Mysticism (London, 1918).Google Scholar
Dacome, Lucia, ‘“To What Purpose Does It Think?”: Dreams, Sick Bodies and Confused Minds in the Age of Reason’, History of Psychiatry 15:4 (2004), 395–416.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Daly, Nicholas, Modernism, Romance, and the ‘Fin de Siècle’: Popular Fiction and British Culture, 1880–1914 (Cambridge, 1999).Google Scholar
Darnton, Robert, Mesmerism and the End of the Enlightenment in France (Cambridge, MA, 1968).Google Scholar
Daston, Lorraine and Park, Katharine, Wonders and the Order of Nature, 1150–1750 (New York, 1998).Google Scholar
Davenport, Reuben Briggs, The Death-blow to Spiritualism: Being the True Story of the Fox Sisters, as Revealed by Authority of Margaret Fox Kane and Catherine Fox Jencken (New York, 1888).Google Scholar
Davies, Owen, The Haunted: A Social History of Ghosts (Basingstoke, 2007).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Davis, Colin, ‘État présent: Hauntology, Spectres and Phantoms’, French Studies 59:3 (2005), 373–9.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Davis, Leonard J., Factual Fictions: The Origins of the English Novel (Philadelphia, 1996).Google Scholar
‘D.D. Home, His Life and Mission’, Journal of the Society for Psychical Research 4 (1889–1890), 101–36.
Defoe, Daniel, An Essay on the History and Reality of Apparitions etc. (London, 1727).Google Scholar
Mare, Walter, Short Stories, 1895 –1926, ed. Mare, Giles (London, 1996).Google Scholar
Dennett, Daniel C., Consciousness Explained (London, 1991).Google Scholar
Denton, William, The Soul of Things: Psychometric Experiments for Re-living History (Wellingborough, 1988).Google Scholar
Derrida, Jacques, Specters of Marx: The State of the Debt, the Work of Mourning, and the New International, trans. Peggy, Kamuf (New York and London, 2006).Google Scholar
Devlin, Judith, The Superstitious Mind: French Peasants and the Supernatural in the Nineteenth Century (London, 1987).Google Scholar
Dickens, Charles, Charles Dickens' Christmas Ghost Stories (London, 1992).Google Scholar
Dickens, CharlesThe Christmas Books (Ware, 1995).Google Scholar
Dickens, CharlesChristmas Stories I (London, 1967).Google Scholar
Dickens, CharlesThe Pickwick Papers (Ware, 1993).Google Scholar
Dickens, CharlesThe Uncommercial Traveller and Reprinted Pieces, etc. (London and New York, 1964).Google Scholar
Dickens, Charles, Hesba, Stretton, George, Augustus Salaet al., The Haunted House (London, 2003).Google Scholar
Didion, Joan, The Year of Magical Thinking (London, 2006).Google Scholar
Dircks, Henry, The Ghost! As Produced in the Spectre Drama, Popularly Illustrating the Marvellous Optical Illusions Obtained by the Apparatus Called the Dircksian Phantasmagoria etc. (London, 1863).Google Scholar
Dixon, Joy, Divine Feminine: Theosophy and Feminism in England (Baltimore and London, 2001).Google Scholar
Dolby, R.G.A, ‘Reflections on Deviant Science’, in On the Margins of Science: The Social Construction of Rejected Knowledge, ed. Roy, Wallis (Keele, 1979), pp.9–47.Google Scholar
Dowbiggin, Ian, ‘Alfred Maury and the Politics of the Unconscious in Nineteenth-century France’, History of Psychiatry 1:3 (1990), 255–87.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dowbiggin, Ian‘French Psychiatry and the Search for a Professional Identity: The Société Médico-Psychologique, 1840–1870’, Bulletin for the History of Medicine 63:3 (1989), 331–55.Google Scholar
Duffy, Bernard J., Food for Thought: A Treatise on Memory, Dreams and Hallucinations (London and Dublin, 1944).Google Scholar
During, Simon, Modern Enchantments: The Cultural Power of Secular Magic (Cambridge, MA, 2002).Google Scholar
Edgeworth, F.Y., ‘The Calculus of Probabilities Applied to Psychical Research I’, Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research 3 (1885), 190–9.Google Scholar
Edgeworth, F. Y.‘The Calculus of Probabilities Applied to Psychical Research II’, Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research 4 (1886–1887), 189–208.Google Scholar
Ellenberger, Henri F., The Discovery of the Unconscious: The History and Evolution of Dynamic Psychiatry (New York, 1970).Google Scholar
Elliotson, John, ‘More Insanity from Spirit-Rapping Fancies’, The Zoist: A Journal of Cerebral Physiology and Mesmerism, and Their Application to Human Welfare 12 (1854–1855), 174–80.Google Scholar
Elliott, Charles Wyllys, Mysteries; or, Glimpses of the Supernatural (New York, 1852).Google Scholar
Ellis, Havelock, ‘On Dreaming of the Dead’, Psychological Review 2:5 (1895), 458–61.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Emerson, Ralph Waldo, ‘Demonology’, North American Review 124:255 (1877), 179–90.Google Scholar
Engels, Friedrich, Dialectics of Nature, trans. Dutt, Clemens (Moscow, 1954).Google Scholar
Epperson, Gordon, The Mind of Edmund Gurney (London, 1997).Google Scholar
Esquirol, J.E.D., Mental Maladies: A Treatise on Insanity, trans. E.K. Hunt (New York and London, 1965).Google Scholar
Evans, Christopher, ‘Parapsychology: A History of Research’, in The Oxford Companion to the Mind, ed. Richard, L. Gregory and Zangwill, O.L. (Oxford, 1987), pp.584–5.Google Scholar
Farmer, John S., How to Investigate Spiritualism (London, 1883).Google Scholar
Fenver, Peter, Late Kant: Towards Another Law of the Earth (New York and London, 2003).Google Scholar
Ferriar, John, An Essay Towards a Theory of Apparitions (London, 1813).Google Scholar
Ferris, Henry, ‘Of the Nightmare’, Dublin University Magazine 25 (1845), 32–44.Google Scholar
Ferris, Henry, [pseud. ‘Irys Herfner’], ‘German Ghosts and Ghost-seers’, Dublin University Magazine 17 (1841), 33–50.Google Scholar
Finucane, Ronald C., Ghosts: Appearances of the Dead and Cultural Transformation (Amherst, 1996).Google Scholar
Fischer, Andreas, ‘ “The Most Disreputable Camera in the World”: Spirit Photography in the United Kingdom in the Early Twentieth Century’, in The Perfect Medium: Photography and the Occult, ed. Clément, Chéroux, Andreas Fischer, Pierre Apraxine, Denis Canguilhem and Sophie Schmit (New Haven and London, 2005), pp.72–91.Google Scholar
,‘F.J.T.’, ‘Spiritualism in the Carpenter Family’, Light: A Journal Devoted to the Highest Interests of Humanity, Both Here and Hereafter (1881–1883); Light: A Journal of Psychical, Occult, and Mystical Research (1883–) 1 (January 27, 1881), 27.
Flammarion, Camille, Death and Its Mystery: At the Moment of Death, trans. Latrobe, Carroll (London, 1922).Google Scholar
Flint, Kate, The Victorians and the Visual Imagination (Cambridge, 2000).Google Scholar
Flournoy, Théodore, Spiritism and Psychology, trans. Hereward, Carrington (London, 1911).Google Scholar
Ford, Jennifer, Coleridge on Dreaming: Romanticism, Dreams and the Medical Imagination (Cambridge, 1998).Google Scholar
Forster, T., Illustrations of the Atmospherical Origin of Epidemic Diseases, and of Its Relation to Their Predisponent Constitutional Causes, Exemplified by Historical Notices and Cases, and on the Twofold Means of Prevention, Mitigation, and Cure, and of the Powerful Influence of Change of Air, as a Principal Remedy, 2nd edn (London, 1829).Google Scholar
Foucault, Michel, Madness and Civilization: A History of Insanity in the Age of Reason, trans. Richard, Howard (London, 1989).Google Scholar
Fountain, Averil, ‘Visual Hallucinations: A Prevalence Study among Hospice Patients’, Palliative Medicine 15:1 (2001), 19–25.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fournier d'Albe, E.E., New Light on Immortality (London, 1908).Google Scholar
Freud, Sigmund, Civilization, Society and Religion: ‘Group Psychology’, ‘Civilization and Its Discontents’ and Other Works, ed. James, Strachey (Harmondsworth, 1991).Google Scholar
Freud, SigmundThe Interpretation of Dreams, ed. James, Strachey (London, 1961).Google Scholar
Freud, SigmundThe Standard Edition of the Complete Psychological Works of Sigmund Freud: vol. XII, 1911–1913: The Case of Schreber, Papers on Technique and Other Works, ed. James, Strachey with Anna Freud (London, 1958).Google Scholar
Fussell, Paul, The Great War and Modern Memory (New York and London, 1975).Google Scholar
Gale, Harlow, ‘Psychical Research in American Universities’, Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research 16 (1897–1898), 583–8.Google Scholar
Galton, Francis, Inquiries into Human Faculty and Its Development (Bristol and Tokyo, 1998).Google Scholar
Galton, Francis‘Statistics of Mental Imagery’, Mind 5:19 (1880), 301–18.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gauld, Alan, The Founders of Psychical Research (London, 1968).Google Scholar
Gauld, AlanA History of Hypnotism (Cambridge, 1992).Google Scholar
Gauld, Alan‘Psychical Research in Cambridge from the Seventeenth Century to the Present’, Journal of the Society for Psychical Research 49 (1978), 925–37.Google Scholar
Gay, Susan Elisabeth, Spiritualistic Sanity: A Reply to Dr. Forbes Winslow's ‘Spiritualistic Madness’ (London, 1879).Google Scholar
‘General Meeting’, Journal of the Society for Psychical Research 4 (1889–1890), 171–4.
‘Ghost Hunting’, Irish Times (31 May 1884).
Gillis, John R., A World of Their Own Making: Myth, Ritual, and the Quest for Family Values (New York, 1996).Google Scholar
Glanvill, Joseph, Saducismus Triumphatus: or, Full and Plain Evidence Concerning Witches and Apparitions, 2nd edn (London, 1682).Google Scholar
Goethe, Johann Wolfgang, Faust (London, 1970).Google Scholar
Goffman, Erving, Frame Analysis: An Essay on the Organization of Experience (Cambridge, MA, 1974).Google Scholar
Gogarty, Oliver St John, As I Was Going down Sackville Street (Dublin, 1994).Google Scholar
Goldfarb, Russell M. and Clare, R. Goldfarb, Spiritualism and Nineteenth-century Letters (Rutherford, 1978).Google Scholar
Goldstein, Jan, Console and Classify: The French Psychiatric Profession in the Nineteenth Century (Chicago and London, 2001).Google Scholar
Goldstein, Jan‘The Hysteria Diagnosis and the Politics of Anticlericalism in Late Nineteenth-century France’, Journal of Modern History 54:2 (1982), 209–39.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gollin, Rita K., Nathaniel Hawthorne and the Truth of Dreams (Baton Rouge and London, 1979).Google Scholar
Goodson, D.W., Alderson, P. and Rosenthal, R., ‘Clinical Significance of Hallucinations in Psychiatric Disorders: A Study of 116 Hallucinatory Patients’, Archives of General Psychiatry 24:1 (1971), 76–80.Google Scholar
Goodwin, Sarah Webster and Elisabeth, Bronfen, ‘Introduction’, in Death and Representation, ed. Sarah Webster, Goodwin and Elisabeth, Bronfen (Baltimore and London, 1993), pp.3–25.Google Scholar
Gray, Frank, ed., Hove Pioneers and the Arrival of Cinema (Brighton, 1996).
Green, Celia and Charles, McCreery, Apparitions (London, 1975).Google Scholar
Greenblatt, Stephen, Hamlet in Purgatory (Princeton, 2001).Google Scholar
Greene, Carleton, Death and Sleep: The Idea of Their Analogy Illustrated by Examples … with a Brief Discourse upon ‘Death and Sleep’, and a Memoir of the Late Mrs. Carleton Greene (London, 1904).Google Scholar
Greg, W. W., ‘Hamlet's Hallucination’, Modern Language Review 12:4 (1917), 393–421.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gunning, Tom, ‘Uncanny Reflections, Modern Illusions: Sighting the Modern Optical Uncanny’, in Uncanny Modernity: Cultural Theories, Modern Anxieties, ed. Jo, Collins and John, Jervis (Basingstoke, 2008), pp.68–90.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gurney, Edmund, ‘Hallucinations’, Mind 10:38 (1885), 161–99.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gurney, Edmund‘Letters on Phantasms: A Reply’, Nineteenth Century 22 (1887), 522–33.Google Scholar
Gurney, Edmund‘Note Relating to Some of the Published Experiments in Thought-Transference’, Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research 5 (1888–1889), 269–70.Google Scholar
Gurney, EdmundTertium Quid: Chapters on Various Disputed Questions, 2 vols (London, 1887).Google Scholar
Gurney, Edmund and Frederic, W.H. Myers, ‘On Apparitions Occurring Soon after Death’, Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research 5 (1888–1889), 403–85.Google Scholar
Gurney, Edmund and Frederic, W.H. Myers‘Visible Apparitions’, Nineteenth Century 16 (1884), 68–95, 851–2.Google Scholar
Gurney, Edmund, Myers, Frederic W.H. and Frank, Podmore, Phantasms of the Living, 2 vols (London, 1886).Google Scholar
Habermas, Jürgen, The Structural Transformation of the Public Sphere: An Inquiry into a Category of Bourgeois Society, trans. Thomas, Burger and Frederick, Lawrence (Cambridge, 1989).Google Scholar
Hacking, Ian, Rewriting the Soul: Multiple Personality and the Sciences of Memory (Princeton, 1995).Google Scholar
Hacking, Ian‘Telepathy: Origins of Randomization in Experimental Design’, Isis 79:3 (1988), 427–51.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hall, G. Stanley, ‘Psychological Literature’, American Journal of Psychology 1:1 (1887), 128–46.Google Scholar
Hall, Trevor H., The Spiritualists: The Story of Florence Cook and William Crookes (London, 1962).Google Scholar
Hall, Trevor H.The Strange Case of Edmund Gurney (London, 1964).Google Scholar
Halliwell, Martin, Romantic Science and the Experience of Self: Transatlantic Crosscurrents from William James to Oliver Sacks (Brookfield, 1999).Google Scholar
Hammond, William A., Spiritualism and Allied Causes and Conditions of Nervous Derangement (London, 1876).Google Scholar
Handley, Sasha, Visions of an Unseen World: Ghost Beliefs and Ghost Stories in Eighteenth-century England (London, 2007).Google Scholar
Hanks, G.W.C. and Cherny, N., ‘Opiod Analgesic Therapy’, in Oxford Textbook of Palliative Medicine, ed. Doyle, D., Hanks, G.W.C. and MacDonald, N., 2nd edn (Oxford, 1998), pp.331–55.Google Scholar
Harris, Ruth, Murders and Madness: Medicine, Law and Society in the ‘Fin de Siècle’ (Oxford, 1989).Google Scholar
Harrison, Jane Ellen, Reminiscences of a Student's Life (London, 1925).Google Scholar
Harrison, William H., Spirits before Our Eyes (London, 1879).Google Scholar
Hartmann, Eduard, ‘Spiritism’, trans. Charles, C. Massey, Light: A Journal Devoted to the Highest Interests of Humanity, Both Here and Hereafter (1881–1883); Light: A Journal of Psychical, Occult, and Mystical Research (1883–) 5 (22 August 1885), 405–9; (29 August 1885), 417–21; (5 September 1885), 429–32; (12 September 1885), 441–4; (19 September 1885), 453–6; (26 September 1885), 466–9; (3 October 1885), 479–82; (10 October 1885), 491–4.
Harvey, John, ‘Revival, Revisions, Visions and Visitations: The Resurgence and Imaging of Supernatural Religion, 1850–1940’, Welsh History Review 23:2 (2006), 75–98.Google Scholar
Hawthorne, Nathaniel, The Blithedale Romance (Harmondsworth, 1986).Google Scholar
Hawthorne, NathanielThe Letters, 1813–1843, ed. Thomas, Woodson, Neal Smith, L. and Norman Holmes, Pearson (Columbus, 1984).Google Scholar
Hawthorne, NathanielTwice-told Tales (London and New York, 1932).Google Scholar
Hayes, Richard, ‘ “The Night Side of Nature”: Henry Ferris, Writing the Dark Gods of Silence’, in Literature and the Supernatural: Essays for the Maynooth Bicentenary, ed. Brian, Cosgrove (Dublin, 1995), pp.42–70.Google Scholar
Haynes, Renée, The Society for Psychical Research 1882–1982: A History (London, 1982).Google Scholar
Hayward, Rhodri, ‘Demonology, Neurology, and Medicine in Edwardian Britain’, Bulletin of the History of Medicine 78 (2004), 37–58.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hayward, Rhodri‘Policing Dreams: History and the Moral Uses of the Unconscious’, History Workshop Journal 49 (2000), 142–60.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hazelgrove, Jenny, Spiritualism and British Society between the Wars (Manchester, 2000).Google Scholar
Hearnshaw, L.S., A Short History of British Psychology 1840–1940 (London, 1964).Google Scholar
Hedge, Frederic H., ‘Ghost-seeing’, North American Review 133:298 (1881), 286–302.Google Scholar
Hellenbach, Lazar, ‘The Hallucination of the “Unconscious” ’, trans. ‘V’, Light: A Journal Devoted to the Highest Interests of Humanity, Both Here and Hereafter (1881–1883); Light: A Journal of Psychical, Occult, and Mystical Research (1883–) 5 (17 December 1885), 590–2.Google Scholar
Henkin, David M., The Postal Age: The Emergence of Modern Communications in Nineteenth-century America (Chicago and London, 2006).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Henson, Louise, ‘ “Half Believing, Half Incredulous”: Elizabeth Gaskell, Superstition and the Victorian Mind’, Nineteenth-century Contexts 24:3 (2002), 251–69.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Henson, Louise‘ “In the Natural Course of Physical Things”: Ghosts and Science in Charles Dickens's All the Year Round’, in Culture and Science in the Nineteenth Century: Media, ed. Louise, Henson, Geoffrey, Cantor, Gowan, Dawsonet al. (Aldershot, 2004), pp.113–24.Google Scholar
Heraeus, Stefanie, ‘Artists and the Dream in Nineteenth-century Paris: Towards a Prehistory of Surrealism’, trans. Deborah Laurie Cohen, History Workshop Journal 48 (1999), 151–68.CrossRef
Herman, Daniel, ‘Whose Knocking? Spiritualism as Entertainment and Therapy in Nineteenth-century San Francisco’, American Nineteenth-century History 7:3 (2006), 417–42.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Herschel, John F.W., Familiar Lectures on Scientific Subjects (New York and London, 1866).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hervey, Saint-Denys, Marie, Jean-Léon, Dreams and How to Guide Them, trans. Fry, Nicholas (London, 1982).Google Scholar
Hibbert, Samuel, Sketches of a Philosophy of Apparitions; or, an Attempt to Trace Such Illusions to Their Physical Causes, 2nd edn (Edinburgh, 1825).Google Scholar
Hiebert, Erwin N., ‘The Transformation of Physics’, in Fin de Siècle and Its Legacy, ed. Mikuláš, Teich and Roy, Porter (Cambridge, 1990), pp.235–53.Google Scholar
Hillman, Robert G., ‘A Scientific Study of Mystery: The Role of the Medical and Popular Press in the Nancy–Salpêtrière Controversy in Hypnotism’, Bulletin of the History of Medicine 39:2 (1965), 163–82.Google Scholar
Hobbes, Thomas, Leviathan, ed. Richard, Tuck (Cambridge, 1991).Google Scholar
Hodges, H.A., The Philosophy of Wilhelm Dilthey (London, 1952).Google Scholar
Hodgson, Richard and Davey, S.J., ‘The Possibilities of Mal-observation and Lapse of Memory from a Practical Point of View’, Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research 4 (1886–1887), 381–495.Google Scholar
Hogan, R. Edward and Kitti, Kaiboriboon, ‘The “Dreamy State”: John Hughlings-Jackson's Ideas of Epilepsy and Consciousness’, American Journal of Psychiatry 160:10 (2003), 1740–7.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Holland, Jeanne, ‘Scraps, Stamps, and Cutouts: Emily Dickinson's Domestic Technologies of Publication’, in Cultural Artifacts and the Production of Meaning: The Page, the Image, and the Body, ed. Margaret, J.M. Ezell and Katherine O'Brien, O'Keeffe (Ann Arbor, MI, 1994), pp.139–81.Google Scholar
Holland, Michael, ed., The Blanchot Reader (Oxford, 1995).
Houdini, Harry, A Magician among the Spirits (New York, 1924).Google Scholar
House, Madeline, Graham, Storey, Kathleen, Tillotson and Angus, Easson, eds, The Letters of Charles Dickens: vol. VII, 1853–1855 (Oxford, 1993).
Houston, Gail Turley, From Dickens to Dracula: Gothic, Economics, and Victorian Fiction (Cambridge, 2005).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
‘How Many Senses Have You Got?’, The Times (30 October 1886), 9.
Howitt, William, The History of the Supernatural in All Ages and Nations and in All Churches Christian and Pagan: Demonstrating a Universal Faith: vol. I (London, 1863).Google Scholar
Hubbell, G.G., Fact and Fancy in Spiritualism, Theosophy and Psychical Research (Cincinnati, 1901).Google Scholar
Hughes, H. Stuart, Consciousness and Society: The Reorientation of European Social Thought, 1890–1930 (London, 1959).Google Scholar
Hulisch, A., ‘Can a Spirit, of Its Own Self, See Another Spirit?’, Light: A Journal Devoted to the Highest Interests of Humanity, Both Here and Hereafter (1881–1883); Light: A Journal of Psychical, Occult, and Mystical Research (1883–) 8 (17 November 1888), 569–70.Google Scholar
Hume, David, Enquiries Concerning Human Understanding and Concerning the Principles of Morals, ed. Selby-Bigge, L.A., 3rd edn (Oxford, 1975).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Humm, Maggie, Modernist Women and Visual Cultures: Virginia Woolf, Vanessa Bell, Photography and Cinema (Edinburgh, 2002).Google Scholar
Hunter, Michael, ‘The Problem of “Atheism” in Early Modern England’, Transactions of the Royal Historical Society 35 (1985), 135–57.Google Scholar
Hutton, R.H., ‘ “The Metaphysical Society”: A Reminiscence’, Nineteenth Century 18 (1885), 177–96.Google Scholar
Hyde, H. Montgomery, Henry James at Home (London, 1969).Google Scholar
Hynes, Samuel, The Edwardian Turn of Mind (London, 1968).Google Scholar
Ibsen, Henrik, A Doll's House; Ghosts, trans. William, Archer (New York, 1911).Google Scholar
Illich, Ivan, Limits to Medicine: Medical Nemesis: The Expropriation of Health (London, 1976).Google Scholar
Inglis, Brian, Natural and Supernatural: A History of the Paranormal from Earliest Times to 1914 (London, 1977).Google Scholar
Innes, A. Taylor, ‘The Psychical Society's Ghosts: A Challenge Renewed’, Nineteenth Century 30 (1891), 764–76.Google Scholar
Innes, A. Taylor‘Where Are the Letters?’, Nineteenth Century 22 (1887), 174–94.Google Scholar
Ireland, William W., The Blot upon the Brain: Studies in History and Psychology, 2nd edn (Edinburgh, 1893).Google Scholar
Ireland, William W.Through the Ivory Gate: Studies in Psychology and History (Edinburgh, 1890).Google Scholar
Jacobs, J., ‘The Dying of Death’, Fortnightly Review 72 (1899), 264–9.Google Scholar
Jaffé, Aniela, An Archetypal Approach to Death Dreams and Ghosts (Einsiedeln, 1999).Google Scholar
James, Henry, Ghost Stories of Henry James (Ware, 2001).Google Scholar
James, HenryLiterary Criticism: French Writers, Other European Writers, The Prefaces to the New York Edition, ed. Leon, Edel and Mark, Wilson (New York, 1984).Google Scholar
James, Tony, Dream, Creativity and Madness in Nineteenth-century France (Oxford, 1995).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
James, William, ‘The Congress of Physiological Psychology at Paris’, Mind 14:56 (1889), 614–16.Google Scholar
James, WilliamEssays in Psychical Research (Cambridge, MA, and London, 1986).Google Scholar
James, WilliamThe Will to Believe, and Other Essays in Popular Psychology (New York, 1898).Google Scholar
James, WilliamWritings 1902–1910 (New York, 1987).Google Scholar
Jarvis, T.M., Accredited Ghost Stories (London, 1823).Google Scholar
Jaspers, Karl, General Psychopathology, trans. Hoenig, J. and Marian, W. Hamilton (Manchester, 1963).Google Scholar
Jay, Martin, Downcast Eyes: The Denigration of Vision in Twentieth-century French Thought (Berkeleyand London, 1993).Google Scholar
Jaynes, Julian, The Origins of Consciousness in the Breakdown of the Bicameral Mind (London, 1993).Google Scholar
Johnson, John, ‘Henry Maudsley on Swedenborg's Messianic Psychosis’, British Journal of Psychiatry 165:5 (1994), 690–1.
Johnston, Sarah Iles, Restless Dead: Encounters between the Living and the Dead in Ancient Greece (Berkeley and London, 1999).Google Scholar
Jolly, Martyn, Faces of the Living Dead: The Belief in Spirit Photography (London, 2006).Google Scholar
Jones, Ann Rosalind and Peter, Stallybrass, Renaissance Clothing and the Materials of Memory (Cambridge, 2000).Google Scholar
Jones, Chris B., Radical Sensibility: Literature and Ideas in the 1790s (London, 1993).Google Scholar
Jones, Ernest, Sigmund Freud: Life and Work: vol. I (London, 1953).Google Scholar
Joyce, James, ‘The Dead’, in The Oxford Book of Irish Short Stories, ed. William, Trevor (Oxford, 2001), pp.228–66.Google Scholar
Joyce, JamesUlysses, ed. Danis, Rose (London, 1998).Google Scholar
Jung, Carl Gustav, Memories, Dreams, Reflections, trans. Richard, Winston and Clara, Winston (London, 1963).Google Scholar
Jung, Carl GustavModern Man in Search of a Soul, trans. Dell, W.S. and Cary, F. Baynes (London, 1984).Google Scholar
Jung, Carl GustavPsychology and the Occult (London, 1987).Google Scholar
Jung, Carl GustavThe Symbolic Life: Miscellaneous Writings, trans. Hull, R.F.C. (London, 1977).Google Scholar
Jung-Stilling, Johann Heinrich, Theory of Pneumatology, in Reply to the Question, What Ought to Be Believed or Disbelieved Concerning Presentiments, Visions, and Apparitions, According to Nature, Reason, and Scripture, trans. Samuel, Jackson (London, 1834).Google Scholar
Kant, Immanuel, Theoretical Philosophy, 1755–1770, trans. David, Walford and Ralf, Meerbote (Cambridge, 1992).Google Scholar
Kaplan, Fred, Dickens and Mesmerism: The Hidden Springs of Fiction (Princeton, 1975).Google Scholar
Kardec, Allan, Experimental Spiritism, trans. Emma, A. Wood (New York, 1970).Google Scholar
Keats, John, The Major Works: Including Endymion, the Odes and Selected Letters, ed. Elizabeth, Cook (Oxford, 2001).Google Scholar
Kelly, Edward F., Emily, Williams Kelly, Adam, Crabtreeet al., eds, Irreducible Mind: Toward a Psychology for the 21st Century (Lanham, 2006).
Kirkland, Winifred, The New Death (Boston, MA, and New York, 1918).Google Scholar
Kittler, Friedrich A., Gramophone, Film, Typewriter, trans. Geoffrey, Winthrop-Young and Michael, Wutz (Stanford, 1999).Google Scholar
Kollar, Rene, Searching for Raymond: Anglicanism, Spiritualism, and Bereavement between the Two World Wars (Lanham, 2000).Google Scholar
Kontou, Tatiana, ‘Ventriloquising the Dead: Representations of Victorian Spiritualism and Psychical Research in Selected Nineteenth- and Late Twentieth-century Fiction’, DPhil thesis, 2006, University of Sussex.
Koslofsky, Craig M., The Reformation of the Dead: Death and Ritual in Early Modern Germany, 1450–1700 (Basingstoke, 2000).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kottler, Malcolm Jay, ‘Alfred Russel Wallace, the Origin of Man, and Spiritualism’, Isis 65:2 (1974), 144–92.Google Scholar
Kroll, Jerome and Bernard, Bachrach, ‘Visions and Psychopathology in the Middle Ages’, Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease 170:1 (1982), 41–9.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kselman, Thomas, Death and the Afterlife in Modern France (Princeton, 1993).Google Scholar
Kuch, Peter, ‘ “Laying the Ghosts”? – W.B. Yeats's Lecture on Ghosts and Dreams’, in Yeats Annual No.5, ed. Warwick, Gould (London, 1987), pp.114–35.Google Scholar
Kuhn, Thomas, The Structure of Scientific Revolutions, 3rd edn (Chicago and London, 1996).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lamb, Geoffrey, Victorian Magic (London, 1976).Google Scholar
Lamont, Peter, The First Psychic: The Peculiar Mystery of a Notorious Victorian Wizard (London, 2005).Google Scholar
Lamont, Peter‘Magician as Conjurer: A Frame Analysis of Victorian Mediums’, Early Popular Visual Culture 4:1 (2006), 21–33.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lamont, Peter‘Spiritualism and a Mid-Victorian Crisis of Evidence’, The Historical Journal 47:4 (2004), 897–920.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lamont, Peter and Richard, Wiseman, Magic in Theory: An Introduction to the Theoretical and Psychological Elements of Conjuring (Bristol, 1999).Google Scholar
Landy, Joshua and Michael, Sale, eds, The Re-enchantment of the World: Secular Magic in a Rational Age (Stanford, 2009).CrossRef
Lang, Andrew, The Book of Dreams and Ghosts (Hollywood, 1972).Google Scholar
Lang, AndrewCock Lane and Common-sense (London, 1894).Google Scholar
Lang, Andrew‘The Comparative Study of Ghost Stories’, Nineteenth Century 17 (1885), 623–32.Google Scholar
Lang, AndrewThe Early Sociology of Religion: vol. IV, The Making of Religion, ed. Turner, Bryan S. (London, 1997).Google Scholar
Lang, AndrewPodmore's, Mr F.“Studies in Psychical Research” ’, Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research 13 (1897–1898), 604–9.Google Scholar
Laqueur, Thomas, ‘Why the Margins Matter: Occultism and the Making of Modernity’, Modern Intellectual History 3:1 (2006), 111–35.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rochefoucauld, François, Maxims, trans. Tancock, Leonard (Harmondsworth, 1959).Google Scholar
Latour, Bruno, Science in Action: How to Follow Scientists and Engineers through Society (Cambridge, MA, 1987).Google Scholar
Lavater, Ludwig, Of Ghosts and Spirits Walking by Night, 1572, ed. Wilson, J. Dover and Yardley, May (Oxford, 1929).Google Scholar
Lavie, Peretz and Hobson, J. Allan, ‘Origin of Dreams: Anticipation of Modern Theories in the Philosophy and Physiology of the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries’, Psychological Bulletin 100:2 (1986), 229–40.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lay, Wilfrid, Man's Unconscious Spirit: The Psychoanalysis of Spiritism (New York, 1921).Google Scholar
Leadbeater, Charles W., The Astral Plane: Its Scenery, Inhabitants and Phenomena (London, 1895).Google Scholar
Leahey, Thomas Hardy and Grace, Evans Leahey, Psychology's Occult Doubles: Psychology and the Problem of Pseudoscience (Chicago, 1983).Google Scholar
LeBlanc, André Robert, ‘On Hypnosis, Simulation, and Faith in the Problem of Post-Hypnotic Suggestion in France, 1884–1896’, PhD thesis, 2000, University of Toronto.
LeBlanc, André Robert, ‘Lecture by Professor Barrett’, Freeman's Journal (26 March 1909).
Fanu, Joseph Sheridan, Best Ghost Stories (Toronto, 1964).Google Scholar
Lélut, Louis Francisque, L'Amulette de Pascal, pour servir à l'histoire des hallucinations (Paris, 1846).Google Scholar
Lélut, Louis FrancisqueDu démon de Socrate, Spécimen d'une application de la science psychologique à celle de l'histoire (Paris, 1836).Google Scholar
‘Leo’, ‘How Spirits are Clothed’, Light: A Journal Devoted to the Highest Interests of Humanity, Both Here and Hereafter (1881–1883); Light: A Journal of Psychical, Occult, and Mystical Research (1883–) 9 (1 June 1889), 268–9.
Leopardi, Giacomo, Thoughts; and, The Broom, trans. Nichols, J.G. (London, 2002).Google Scholar
Leudar, Ivan and Wes, Sharrock, ‘The Cases of John Bunyan, Part 1. Taine and Royce’, History of Psychiatry 13:51 (2002), 247–65.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Leudar, Ivan and Wes, Sharrock‘The Cases of John Bunyan, Part 2. James and Janet’, History of Psychiatry 13:52 (2002), 401–17.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Levine, George, Dying to Know: Scientific Epistemology and Narrative in Victorian England (Chicago and London, 2002).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lewes, George Henry, ‘Dickens in Relation to Criticism’, Fortnightly Review 11 (1872), 141–54.Google Scholar
Lewes, George Henry‘Seeing Is Believing’, Blackwood's Magazine 88 (1860), 381–95.Google Scholar
Liester, Mitchell B., ‘Toward a New Definition of Hallucination’, American Journal of Orthopsychiatry 68:2 (1998), 305–12.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Linton, Eliza Lynn, ‘Our Illusions’, Fortnightly Review 49 (1891), 584–97.Google Scholar
Littré, Émile, ‘Un fragment de médecine rétrospective’, Philosophie positive 5 (1869), 103–20.Google Scholar
Llinás, R.R. and Paré, D., ‘Of Dreaming and Wakefulness’, Neuroscience 44:3 (1991), 521–35.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lodge, Oliver, ‘Memorial to Mr. Myers at Cheltenham’, Journal of the Society for Psychical Research 13 (1907–1908), 148–52.Google Scholar
Lodge, Oliver‘In Memory of F.W.H. Myers’, Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research 16 (1901–1903), 1–12.Google Scholar
Loe, Thomas, ‘The Strange Modernism of Le Fanu's “Green Tea” ’, in That Other World: The Supernatural and the Fantastic in Irish Literature and Its Contexts: vol. I, ed. Bruce, Stewart (Gerrards Cross, 1998), pp.293–306.Google Scholar
Luckhurst, Roger, The Invention of Telepathy, 1870–1901 (Oxford, 2002).Google Scholar
Machen, Arthur, ‘Ghosts and Dreams’, Literature 5 (19 August 1899), 167–9.Google Scholar
Mackay, Charles, Memoirs of Extraordinary Popular Delusions and the Madness of Crowds (London, 1869).Google Scholar
Macnish, Robert, The Philosophy of Sleep (Glasgow, 1830); 3rd edn (Glasgow, 1845).Google Scholar
Mahowald, Mark W., Woods, Sharon R. and Schenck, Carlos H., ‘Sleeping Dreams, Waking Hallucinations, and the Central Nervous System’, Dreaming 8:2 (1998), 89–102.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mandler, Peter, Alex, Owen, Seth, Koven and Susan, Pedersen, ‘Cultural Histories of the Old and the New: Rereading the Work of Janet Oppenheim’, Victorian Studies 41:1 (1997), 69–105.Google Scholar
Maple, Eric, The Realm of Ghosts (London, 1964).Google Scholar
Marshall, Peter, Beliefs and the Dead in Reformation England (Oxford, 2002).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marshall, PeterMother Leakey and the Bishop: A Ghost Story (Oxford, 2007).Google Scholar
Martin, Lillien J., ‘Ghosts and the Projection of Visual Images’, American Journal of Psychology 26:3 (1915), 251–7.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marx, Karl and Friedrich, Engels, The German Ideology. Part One, with Selections from Parts Two and Three, Together with Marx's ‘Introduction to a Critique of Political Economy’, ed. Arthur, C.J. (London, 1970).Google Scholar
Massey, C.C., ‘The Possibilities of Mal-observation in Relation to Evidence for the Phenomena of Spiritualism’, Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research 4 (1886–1887), 75–99.Google Scholar
Matlock, Jann, ‘Ghostly Politics’, Diacritics 30:3 (2000), 53–71.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Maudsley, Henry, Body and Mind: An Inquiry into their Connection and Mutual Influences, Specifically in Reference to Mental Disorders (New York, 1871).Google Scholar
Maudsley, Henry‘Emanuel Swedenborg’, Journal of Mental Science 15 (1869), 169–96.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Maudsley, Henry‘Hallucinations of the Senses’, Fortnightly Review 24 (1878), 370–86.Google Scholar
Maudsley, HenryNatural Causes and Supernatural Seemings (London, 1886).Google Scholar
Maudsley, HenryThe Physiology and Pathology of the Mind (New York, 1867).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mauskopf, Seymour H., ‘Marginal Science’, in Companion to the History of Modern Science, ed. Olby, R.C., Cantor, G.N., Christie, J.R.R. and Hodge, M.J.S. (London, 1990), pp.869–85.Google Scholar
Mauskopf, Seymour H. and Michael, R. McVaugh, The Elusive Science: Origins of Experimental Psychical Research (Baltimore and London, 1980).Google Scholar
Maxwell-Stuart, P.G., Ghosts: A History of Phantoms, Ghouls, and Other Spirits of the Dead (Stroud, 2006).Google Scholar
Mayo, Herbert, On the Truths Contained in Popular Superstitions with an Account of Mesmerism (Edinburgh and London, 1851).Google Scholar
McCorristine, Shane, ‘Last Nights in Paris: Exploring Lautréamont's Surreal City’, The History Review 15 (2005), 115–35.Google Scholar
McDougall, William, Body and Mind: A History and a Defense of Animism (London, 1911).Google Scholar
McGarry, Molly, Ghosts of Futures Past: Spiritualism and the Cultural Politics of Nineteenth-century America (Berkeley and London, 2008).Google Scholar
Méheust, Bertrand, Somnambulisme et médiumnité: vol. I, Le Défi du magnétisme (Paris, 1999).Google Scholar
Méheust, BertrandSomnambulisme et médiumnité: vol. II, Le Choc des sciences psychiques (Paris, 1999).Google Scholar
Melechi, Antonio, Servants of the Supernatural: The Night Side of the Victorian Mind (London, 2008).Google Scholar
,‘Mental Epidemics’, Fraser's Magazine for Town & Country 65 (1862), 490–505.
Micale, Mark S., ed., The Mind of Modernism: Medicine, Psychology, and the Cultural Arts in Europe and America, 1880–1940 (Stanford, 2004).
Middleton, Jessie Adelaide, Another Grey Ghost Book: With a Chapter on Prophetic Dreams and a Note on Vampires (London, 1915).Google Scholar
Mill, John Stuart, Collected Works of John Stuart Mill: vol. VII, ed. Robson, J.M. (London, 1973–1974).Google Scholar
Monleon, José B., ‘1848: The Assault on Reason’, in The Horror Reader, ed. Gelder, Ken (London and New York, 2000), pp.20–8.Google Scholar
Montenon, Corinne, ‘Materialisation Phenomena in British and French Spiritualism and Psychical Research, c.1870–1920’, PhD thesis, 2004, University of Birmingham.
Morrissey, Susan K., ‘Drinking to Death: Suicide, Vodka and Religious Burial in Russia’, Past and Present 186 (2005), 117–46.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mort, Frank, Dangerous Sexualities: Medico-moral Politics in England since 1850, 2nd edn (London and New York, 2000).Google Scholar
Mott, R.H., Small, I.F. and Anderson, J., ‘Comparative Study of Hallucinations’, Archives of General Psychiatry 12 (1965), 595–601.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mourgue, Raoul, ‘Étude-critique sur l’évolution des idées relatives à la nature des hallucinations vraies', doctoral thesis, Paris, 1919.Google Scholar
Munthe, Axel, The Story of San Michele (London, 1991).Google Scholar
‘M.W.G.’, ‘Clothes Spooks’, Light: A Journal Devoted to the Highest Interests of Humanity, Both Here and Hereafter (1881–1883); Light: A Journal of Psychical, Occult, and Mystical Research (1883–) 10 (29 November 1890), 572.
Myers, Arthur T., ‘International Congress of Experimental Psychology’, Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research 6 (1889–1890), 171–82.Google Scholar
Myers, Frederic W.H., ‘A Defence of Phantasms of the Dead’, Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research 6 (1889–1890), 314–57.Google Scholar
Myers, Frederic W.H.‘The Drift of Psychical Research’, National Review 24 (1894), 190–209.Google Scholar
Myers, Frederic W.H.Human Personality and Its Survival of Bodily Death (New York, 1909).Google Scholar
Myers, Frederic W.H.‘In Memory of Henry Sidgwick’, Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research 15 (1900–1901), 452–63.Google Scholar
Myers, Frederic W.H.‘Multiplex Personality’, Nineteenth Century 20 (1886), 648–66.Google Scholar
Myers, Frederic W.H.‘On Recognised Apparitions Occurring More Than a Year after Death’, Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research 6 (1889–1890), 13–65.Google Scholar
Myers, Frederic W.H.‘Presidential Address’, Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research 15 (1900–1901), 110–27.Google Scholar
Myers, Frederic W.H.‘Professor Pierre Janet's “Automatisme psychologique”’, Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research 6 (1889–1890), 186–99.Google Scholar
Myers, Frederic W.H.‘Resolute Credulity’, Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research 10 (1895), 213–43.Google Scholar
Myers, Frederic W.H.‘The Right Hon. W.E. Gladstone’, Journal of the Society for Psychical Research 8 (1897–1898), 260.Google Scholar
Myers, Frederic W.H.‘Science and a Future Life’, Nineteenth Century 29 (1891), 628–47.Google Scholar
Myers, Frederic W.H.‘The Subliminal Consciousness’, Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research 9 (1893–1894), 3–128.Google Scholar
Myers, Frederic W.H.‘The Work of Edmund Gurney in Experimental Psychology’, Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research 5 (1888–1889), 359–73.Google Scholar
Myers, Rollo, ‘Edmund Gurney's “The Power of Sound”’, Music and Letters 53 (1972), 36–42.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nadis, Fred, Wonder Shows: Performing Science, Magic, and Religion in America (New Brunswick and London, 2005).Google Scholar
Nancy, Jean-Luc, The Inoperative Community, ed. Peter, Connor, trans. Peter, Connor, Lisa, Garbus, Michael, Holland and Simona, Sawhney (Minneapolis and London, 1990).Google Scholar
Nelson, Geoffrey K., Spiritualism and Society (London, 1969).Google Scholar
Nicholson, William, ‘Narrative and Explanation of the Appearance of Phantoms and Other Figures in the Exhibition of the Phantasmagoria, with Remarks on the Philosophical Use of Common Occurrences’, Journal of Natural Philosophy, Chemistry and the Arts 1 (1802), 147–50.Google Scholar
Nicol, Fraser, ‘The Founders of the S.P.R.’, Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research 55 (1966–1972), 341–67.Google Scholar
Nicolai, Christoph Friedrich, ‘A Memoir on the Appearance of Spectres or Phantoms Occasioned by Disease, with Psychological Remarks. Read by Nicolai to the Royal Society of Berlin, on the 28th of February, 1799’, Journal of Natural Philosophy, Chemistry and the Arts 6 (1803), 161–79.Google Scholar
Nietzsche, Friedrich, Human, All Too Human, trans. Marion, , Faber and Stephen, Lehmann (London, 1994).Google Scholar
Noakes, Richard, ‘The “Bridge Which Is between Physical and Psychical Research”: William Fletcher Barrett, Sensitive Flames, and Spiritualism’, History of Science 42 (2004), 419–64.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nordau, Max, Degeneration (Lincoln, NE, and London, 1993).Google Scholar
‘Notes’, Mind 13:49 (1888), 149–50.
Noyes, Ralph. ‘The Other Side of Plato's Wall’, in Ghosts: Deconstruction, Psychoanalysis, History, ed. Peter, Buse and Andrew, Stott (Basingstoke, 1999), pp.244–62.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
‘Objects of the Society’, Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research 1 (1882–1883), 3–7.
O'Byrne, F.D., Reichenbach's Letters on Od and Magnetism (1852). Published for the First Time in English, with Extracts from His Other Works, so as to Make a Complete Presentation of the Odic Theory (London, 1926).Google Scholar
O'Donnell, John M., The Origins of Behaviorism: American Psychology, 1870–1920 (New York and London, 1985).Google Scholar
Ogden, Daniel, Magic, Witchcraft, and Ghosts in the Greek and Roman Worlds: A Sourcebook (Oxford, 2002).Google Scholar
Ollier, Charles, Fallacy of Ghosts, Dreams, and Omens; With Stories of Witchcraft, Life-In-Death, and Monomania (London, 1848).Google Scholar
Oman, Charles, ‘The Old Oxford Phasmatological Society’, Journal of the Society for Psychical Research 33 (1946), 208–17.Google Scholar
Oppenheim, Janet, The Other World: Spiritualism and Psychical Research in England, 1850–1914 (Cambridge, 1985).Google Scholar
Oppenheim, Janet.‘Shattered Nerves’: Doctors, Patients, and Depression in Victorian England (New York and Oxford, 1991).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ostry, Elaine, Social Dreaming: Dickens and the Fairy Tale (New York and London, 2002).Google Scholar
Otis, Laura, ‘The Metaphoric Circuit: Organic and Technological Communication in the Nineteenth Century’, Journal of the History of Ideas 63:1 (2002), 105–28.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Owen, Alex, The Darkened Room: Women, Power and Spiritualism in Late Nineteenth-century England (London, 1989).Google Scholar
Owen, AlexThe Place of Enchantment: British Occultism and the Culture of the Modern (Chicago and London, 2004).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Owen, Robert Dale, Footfalls on the Boundary of Another World: With Narrative Illustrations (London, 1860).Google Scholar
Palfreman, Jon, ‘Between Scepticism and Credulity: A Study of Victorian Scientific Attitudes to Modern Spiritualism’, in On the Margin of Science: The Social Construction of Rejected Knowledge, ed. Roy Wallis (Keele, 1979), pp.201–36.Google Scholar
Panek, Richard, The Invisible Century: Einstein, Freud, and the Search for Hidden Universes (London, 2004).Google Scholar
Parish, Edmund, Hallucinations and Illusions: A Study of the Fallacies of Perception (London, 1897).Google Scholar
Past Feelings Renovated; or, Ideas Occasioned by the Perusal of Dr. Hibbert's ‘Philosophy of Apparitions’ Written with the View of Countering Any Sentiments Approaching Materialism, Which That Work, However Unintentional on the Part of the Author, May Have a Tendency to Produce (London, 1828).
Paterson, Robert, ‘An Account of Several Cases of Spectral Illusions, with Observations on the Phenomena and on the States of Bodily Indisposition in which They Occur’, Edinburgh Medical and Surgical Journal 59 (1843), 77–102.Google Scholar
Pearsall, Ronald, The Table-Rappers: The Victorians and the Occult (Stroud, 2004).Google Scholar
Pease, Edward R., The History of the Fabian Society (London, 1916).Google Scholar
Peirce, Charles S., ‘Telepathy and Perception’, in Collected Papers of Charles Sanders Peirce: vol. VII, Science and Philosophy; vol. VIII, Reviews, Correspondence, and Bibliography, ed. Arthur, W. Burks (Cambridge, MA, 1966), pp.359–97.Google Scholar
Peirce, Charles S.Writings of Charles S. Peirce: A Chronological Edition: vol. VI, 1886–1890, ed. Nathan, Houser and Peirce, Edition Project (Bloomington, 2000).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pels, Peter, ‘Spirits of Modernity: Alfred Wallace, Edward Tylor, and the Visual Politics of Fact’, in Magic and Modernity: Interfaces of Revelation and Concealment, ed. Birgit, Meyer and Peter, Pels (Stanford, 2003), pp.241–71.Google Scholar
Penny, A.J., ‘Ready-made Clothes’, Light: A Journal Devoted to the Highest Interests of Humanity, Both Here and Hereafter (1881–1883); Light: A Journal of Psychical, Occult, and Mystical Research (1883–) 7 (3 September 1887), 411–12.Google Scholar
Pepper, John Henry, The True History of the Ghost; and All about Metempsychosis (London, 1890).Google Scholar
Perky, Cheves West, ‘An Experimental Study of Imagination’, American Journal of Psychology 21:3 (1910), 422–52.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Perry, Seamus, Coleridge and the Uses of Division (Cambridge, 1999).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Peters, Uwe Henrik, Studies in German Romantic Psychiatry: Justinus Kerner as a Psychiatric Practitioner, E.T.A. Hoffmann as a Psychiatric Theorist (London, 1990).Google Scholar
Petroski, Karen, ‘“The Ghost of an Idea”: Dickens's Uses of Phantasmagoria, 1842–44’, Dickens Quarterly 16:2 (1999), 71–93.Google Scholar
Phillips, Forbes and , R.Thurston Hopkins, War and the Weird (London, 1916).Google Scholar
‘Philosophius’, Ghosts and Their Modern Worshippers (London, 1892).
Pick, Daniel, Faces of Degeneration: A European Disorder, c.1848–c.1918 (Cambridge, 1989).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pick, Daniel with Lyndal, Roper, eds, Dreams and History: The Interpretation of Dreams from Ancient Greece to Modern Psychoanalysis (London, 2004).Google Scholar
Plato, , Theaetetus; Sophist, trans. Harold, North Fowler (London, 1921).Google Scholar
Podmore, Frank, Apparitions and Thought-transference: An Examination of the Evidence for Telepathy (New York, 1915).Google Scholar
Podmore, FrankModern Spiritualism: A History and Criticism, 2 vols (London, 1902).Google Scholar
Podmore, FrankThe Naturalisation of the Supernatural (New York and London, 1908).Google Scholar
Podmore, Frank‘Phantasms of the Dead from Another Point of View’, Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research 6 (1889–1890), 227–313.Google Scholar
Podmore, FrankStudies in Psychical Research (London, 1897).Google Scholar
Porter, Roy, The Greatest Benefit to Mankind: A Medical History of Humanity from Antiquity to the Present (London, 1999).Google Scholar
Porter, RoyMadmen: A Social History of Madhouses, Mad-Doctors and Lunatics (Stroud, 2006).Google Scholar
Porter, Roy and Helen, Nicholson, eds, Women, Madness and Spiritualism: vol. I, Georgina Weldon and Louisa Lowe (London and New York, 2003).Google Scholar
Preliminary Report of the Commission Appointed by the University of Pennsylvania to Investigate Modern Spiritualism (Philadelphia, 1887).
,‘Psychical Research’, in The Fin de Siècle: A Reader in Cultural History, c.1880–1900, ed. Sally Ledger and Roger Luckhurst (Oxford, 2000), pp.278–80.Google Scholar
,‘Psychical Research’, Lancet (22 December 1883), 1104.
Quinney, Laura, ‘Wordsworth's Ghosts and the Model of the Mind’, European Romantic Review 9:2 (1998), 293–301.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rabaté, Jean-Michel, The Ghosts of Modernity (Gainesville, 1996).Google Scholar
Rabinow, Paul, ed., The Foucault Reader (Harmondsworth, 1986).Google Scholar
Radcliffe, John Netten, Fiends, Ghosts, and Sprites: Including an Account of the Origin and Nature of Belief in the Supernatural (London, 1854).Google Scholar
Randi, James, Flim-Flam!: Psychics, ESP, Unicorns, and Other Delusions (Buffalo, 1982).Google Scholar
Raverat, Gwen, Period Piece: A Cambridge Childhood (London, 1960).Google Scholar
Redgrove, H. Stanley and Redgrove, I.M.L., Joseph Glanvill and Psychical Research in the Seventeenth Century (London, 1921).Google Scholar
Report on Spiritualism, of the Committee of the London Dialectical Society, Together with the Evidence, Oral and Written, and a Selection from the Correspondence (London, 1873).
Richards, Graham, ‘Britain on the Couch: The Popularization of Psychoanalysis in Britain 1918–1940’, Science in Context 13:2 (2000), 183–230.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Richards, Graham‘Edward Cox, the Psychological Society of Great Britain (1875–1879) and the Meanings of an Institutional Failure’, in Psychology in Britain: Historical Essays and Personal Reflections, ed. Bunn, G.C., Lovie, A.D. and Richards, G.D. (Leicester, 2001), pp.35–53.Google Scholar
Richet, Charles, Thirty Years of Psychical Research: Being a Treatise in Metapsychics, trans. Brath, Stanley (London, 1923).Google Scholar
Roffe, Alfred, An Essay upon the Ghost-belief of Shakespeare (London, 1851).Google Scholar
Rogers, Edmund Dawson, ‘Origin of the Society for Psychical Research’, Light: A Journal Devoted to the Highest Interests of Humanity, Both Here and Hereafter (1881–1883); Light: A Journal of Psychical, Occult, and Mystical Research (1883–) 13 (September 1893), 429–30.Google Scholar
Rogers, Edward Coit, Philosophy of Mysterious Agents, Human and Mundane, etc. (Boston, MA, 1856).Google Scholar
Ross, Dorothy, G. Stanley Hall: The Psychologist as Prophet (Chicago and London, 1972).Google Scholar
Ross, Dorothy ed., Modernist Impulses in the Human Sciences, 1870–1930 (Baltimore, 1994).
Roth, Michael S., ed., Rediscovering History: Culture, Politics, and the Psyche (Stanford, 1994).
Rothblatt, Sheldon, The Revolution of the Dons: Cambridge and Society in Victorian England (London, 1968).Google Scholar
Royce, Josiah, ‘Hallucination of Memory and “Telepathy”’, Mind 13:50 (1888), 244–8.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ruskin, John, Modern Painters: vol. III (Boston, MA, 1890).Google Scholar
Russell, Claire, ‘The Environment of Ghosts’, in The Folklore of Ghosts, ed. Ellis Davidson, Hilda R. and Russell, W.M.S. (Bury St Edmunds, 1981), pp.109–37.Google Scholar
Rylance, Rick, Victorian Psychology and British Culture, 1850–1880 (Oxford, 2000).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
,‘A Sadducean Bias’, Light: A Journal Devoted to the Highest Interests of Humanity, Both Here and Hereafter (1881–1883); Light: A Journal of Psychical, Occult, and Mystical Research (1883–) 16 (25 April 1896), 198.
Salter, Helen de G., ‘Impressions of Some Early Workers in the S.P.R.’, Journal of Parapsychology 14:1 (1950), 24–36.Google Scholar
Sarbin, Theodore R., ‘The Concept of Hallucination’, Journal of Personality 35 (1967), 359–80.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sarbin, Theodore R. and Joseph, B. Juhasz, ‘The Historical Background of the Concept of Hallucination’, History of the Behavioural Sciences 3 (1967), 339–58.3.0.CO;2-U>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Scarry, Elaine, ‘On Vivacity: The Difference between Daydreaming and Imagining-under-Authorial-Institution’, Representations 52 (1995), 1–26.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schiller, F. C. S., Humanism: Philosophical Essays (New York, 1969).Google Scholar
Schiller, Friedrich, Aesthetical and Philosophical Essays, the Ghost-seer, and the Sport of Destiny: vol. V (Boston, MA, 1902).Google Scholar
Schmitt, Jean-Claude, Ghosts in the Middle Ages: The Living and the Dead in Medieval Society, trans. Fagan, Teresa Lavender (Chicago, 1998).Google Scholar
Schönfeld, Martin, The Philosophy of the Young Kant: The Precritical Project (Oxford, 2000).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schopenhauer, Arthur, Parerga and Paralipomena: Short Philosophical Essays: vol. I, trans. Payne, E.F.J. (Oxford, 1974).Google Scholar
Schopenhauer, ArthurThe World as Will and Idea: vol. I, trans. Kemp, J. and Haldane, R. B. (London, 1964).Google Scholar
Schultz, Bart, Henry Sidgwick, Eye of the Universe: An Intellectual Biography (Cambridge, 2004).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schwartz, Sophie, ‘A Historical Loop of One Hundred Years: Similarities between Nineteenth Century and Contemporary Dream Research’, Dreaming 10:1 (2000), 55–66.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Scott, Walter, Letters on Demonology and Witchcraft (London, 1884).Google Scholar
Scott, Walter‘Novels of Ernest Theodore Hoffmann’, in Critical and Miscellaneous Essays: vol. II (Philadelphia, 1841).Google Scholar
Seashore, Carl E., ‘Measurements of Illusions and Hallucinations in Normal Life’, in Studies from the Yale Psychological Laboratory: vol.III, ed. Edward W. Scripture (1895), pp.1–67.
Seltzer, Mark, Bodies and Machines (New York and London, 1992).Google Scholar
Seltzer, Mark‘The Postal Unconscious’, The Henry James Review 21 (2000), 197–206.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Selwyn, Pamela E., Everyday Life in the German Book Trade: Friedrich Nicolai as Bookseller and Publisher in the Age of Enlightenment, 1750–1810 (University Park, 2000).Google Scholar
Shakespeare, William, The Complete Works of William Shakespeare (London, 1966).Google Scholar
Shapin, Steven, The Scientific Revolution (Chicago, 1996).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sharp, Lynn L., Secular Spirituality: Reincarnation and Spiritism in Nineteenth-century France (Lanham, 2006).Google Scholar
Shell, Susan Meld, The Embodiment of Reason: Kant on Spirit, Generation, and Community (Chicago and London, 1996).Google Scholar
Sheppard, E.A., Henry James and ‘The Turn of the Screw’ (Auckland and London, 1974).Google Scholar
Shorter, Edward, A History of Psychiatry: From the Era of the Asylum to the Age of Prozac (New York, 1997).Google Scholar
Sidgwick, Arthur and Eleanor, M. Sidgwick, Henry Sidgwick: A Memoir (London, 1906).Google Scholar
Sidgwick, Eleanor M., ‘Notes on the Evidence, Collected by the Society, for Phantasms of the Dead’, Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research 3 (1885), 69–150.Google Scholar
Sidgwick, Eleanor M.‘Phantasms of the Living: An Examination and Analysis of Cases of Telepathy between Living Persons Printed in the “Journal” of the Society for Psychical Research since the Publication of the Book “Phantasms of the Living”, by Gurney, Myers, and Podmore, in 1886’, Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research 33 (1923), 23–429.Google Scholar
Sidgwick, Eleanor M.‘Zur Kritik des Telepathischen Beweis Matériels. By Edmund Parish. Leipzig. 1897’, Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research 13 (1897–1898), 589–601.Google Scholar
Sidgwick, Henry, ‘Address by the President on the Census of Hallucinations’, Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research 6 (1889–1890), 7–12.Google Scholar
Sidgwick, Henry‘Address by the President. Second Address on the Census of Hallucinations’, Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research 6 (1889–1890), 407–28.Google Scholar
Sidgwick, Henry‘The Canons of Evidence in Psychical Research’, Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research 6 (1889–1890), 1–6.Google Scholar
Sidgwick, HenryThe Methods of Ethics, 2nd edn (London, 1877).Google Scholar
Sidgwick, Henry‘Note on Mr. Massey's Paper’, Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research 4 (1886–1887), 99–110.Google Scholar
Sidgwick, Henry‘President's Address’, Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research 1 (1882–1883), 7–12.Google Scholar
Sidgwick, Henry‘President's Address’, Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research 2 (1884), 152–6.Google Scholar
Sidgwick, Henry‘President's Address’, Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research 5 (1888–1889), 271–8.Google Scholar
Sidgwick, Henry, Alice, Johnson, Myers, Frederic W.H., Podmore, Frank and Sidgwick, Eleanor M., ‘Report on the Census of Hallucinations’, Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research 10 (1894), 25–423.Google Scholar
Simmel, Georg, The Sociology of Georg Simmel, ed. Wolff, Kurt H. (New York and London, 1950).Google Scholar
Simon, Robert I., ‘Great Paths Cross: Freud and James at Clark University, 1909’, American Journal of Psychiatry 124:6 (1967), 831–4.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Simpson, Jacqueline, ‘Ghosts’, in Encyclopedia of Death and Dying, ed. Howarth, Glennys and Leaman, Oliver (London and New York, 2001), pp. 207–9.Google Scholar
Simpson, Jeffrey E., ‘Thoreau “Dreaming Awake and Asleep”’, Modern Language Studies 14:3 (1984), 54–62.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Škodlar, B., Dernovsek, M.Z. and Kocmur, M., ‘Psychopathology of Schizophrenia in Ljubljana (Slovenia) from 1881 to 2000: Changes in the Content of Delusions in Schizophrenic Patients Related to Various Sociopolitical, Technical and Scientific Changes’, International Journal of Social Psychiatry 54:2 (2008), 101–11.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Skultans, Vieda, ‘Mediums, Controls and Eminent Men’, in Women's Religious Experience, ed. Holden, Pat (London, 1983), pp.15–26.Google Scholar
Slade, Peter D. and Bentall, Richard P., Sensory Deception: A Scientific Analysis of Hallucination (London and Sydney, 1988).Google Scholar
Smajic, Srdjan, ‘The Trouble with Ghost-seeing: Vision, Ideology, and Genre in the Victorian Ghost Story’, English Literary History 70:4 (2003), 1107–35.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, Adam, The Theory of Moral Sentiments, ed. Raphael, D.D. and Macfie, A.L. (Oxford, 1976).Google Scholar
Soussloff, Catherine M., ‘The Turn to Visual Culture: On Visual Culture and Techniques of the Observer’, Visual Anthropology Review 12:1 (1996), 77–83.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Spinoza, Baruch, The Ethics and Selected Letters, trans. Shirley, Samuel (Indianapolis, 1982).Google Scholar
,‘Spookical Research’, Saturday Review of Politics, Literature, Science, and Art 62 (1886), 648–50.
,‘Spooks and Their Friends’, Saturday Review of Politics, Literature, Science, and Art 62 (1886), 750–1.
‘The S.P.R. and the C.A.S.’, Light: A Journal Devoted to the Highest Interests of Humanity, Both Here and Hereafter (1881–1883); Light: A Journal of Psychical, Occult, and Mystical Research (1883–) 3 (3 February 1883), 54.
Sprinker, Michael, ed., Ghostly Demarcations: A Symposium on Jacques Derrida's ‘Specters of Marx’ (London, 1999).
Stafford, Barbara Maria, Artful Science: Enlightenment, Entertainment and the Eclipse of Visual Education (Cambridge, MA, and London, 1994).Google Scholar
Stafford, Barbara MariaBody Criticism: Imaging the Unseen in Enlightenment Art and Medicine (Cambridge, MA, and London, 1991).Google Scholar
Starr, George, ‘Why Defoe Probably Did not Write The Apparition of Mrs. Veal’, Eighteenth-century Fiction 15:3–4 (2003), 421–50.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stead, W. T., ‘The Census of Ghosts’, Borderland: A Quarterly Review and Index 1 (1894), 498–505.Google Scholar
Stead, W. T.‘Wanted, a Census of Ghosts!’, The Review of Reviews 4 (1891), 257–8.Google Scholar
Steen, Robert Hunter, ‘Hallucinations in the Sane’, Journal of Mental Science 63 (1917), 328–46.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stirner, Max, The Ego and Its Own, trans. Byington, Steven (London, 1982).Google Scholar
Stocking, George W., Jr, ‘Animism in Theory and Practice: E.B. Tylor's Unpublished “Notes on ‘Spiritualism’,”’, Man 6:1 (1971), 88–104.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stolow, Jeremy, ‘Techno-religious Imaginaries: On the Spiritual Telegraph and the Circum-Atlantic World of the Nineteenth Century’, in Institute on Globalization and the Human Condition Working Paper Series, ed. Coleman, William (Hamilton, ON, 2006).Google Scholar
Stone, G. W., An Exposition of Views Respecting the Principal Facts, Causes, and Peculiarities Involved in Spirit Manifestations, together with Interesting Phenomenal Statements and Communications (London, 1852).Google Scholar
Strange, Julie-Marie, Death, Grief and Poverty in Britain, 1870–1914 (Cambridge, 2005).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Strindberg, August, Inferno; and from an Occult Diary, trans. Sandbach, Mary (Harmondsworth, 1979).Google Scholar
Stronks, G. J., ‘The Significance of Balthasar Bekker's The Enchanted World’, in Witchcraft in the Netherlands from the Fourteenth to the Twentieth Century, ed. Gijswijt, Marijke and Frijhoff, Willem, trans. Rachel, M.J.Wilden-Fall, (Rotterdam, 1991), pp.149–56.Google Scholar
Struve, Heinrich, Hamlet: Eine Charakterstudie (Weimar, 1876).Google Scholar
Swedenborg, Emanuel, Heaven and Hell, trans. Dole, George F. (New York, 1990).Google Scholar
Sword, Helen, Ghostwriting Modernism (London and Ithaca, NY, 2002).Google Scholar
Symonds, John Addington, Sleep and Dreams; Two Lectures Delivered at the Bristol Literary and Philosophical Institution (London, 1851).Google Scholar
Taillepied, Noel, A Treatise of Ghosts etc., trans. Summers, Montague (London, 1933).Google Scholar
Taine, Hippolyte, On Intelligence, trans. Haye, T.D. (London, 1871).Google Scholar
Taylor, Eugene, ‘Oh Those Fabulous James Boys!’, Psychology Today 28:2 (1995), 56–66.Google Scholar
Taylor, Jenny Bourne and Sally, Shuttleworth, eds, Embodied Selves: An Anthology of Psychological Texts, 1830–1890 (Oxford and New York, 1998).Google Scholar
Tennyson, Alfred, Lord, The Complete Works (London, 1905).Google Scholar
Thomas, Keith, Religion and the Decline of Magic: Studies in Popular Beliefs in Sixteenth- and Seventeenth-Century England (London, 1971).Google Scholar
Thurschwell, Pamela, Literature, Technology, and Magical Thinking, 1880–1920 (Cambridge, 2001).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Treitel, Corinna, A Science of the Soul: Occultism and the Genesis of the German Modern (Baltimore and London, 2004).Google Scholar
Troland, Leonard T., ‘The Freudian Psychology and Psychical Research’, Journal of Abnormal Psychology 8:6 (1914), 405–28.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Turner, Frank Miller, Between Science and Religion: The Reaction to Scientific Naturalism in Late Victorian England (New Haven and London, 1974).Google Scholar
Turner, Frank Miller‘Public Science in Britain, 1880–1919’, Isis 71:4 (1980), 589–608.Google Scholar
Twain, Mark, ‘Mental Telegraphy’, in Literature and Science in the Nineteenth Century: An Anthology, ed. Otis, Laura (Oxford, 2002), pp.99–103.Google Scholar
Tylor, Edward B., Primitive Culture: Researches into the Development of Mythology, Philosophy, Religion, Art, and Custom: vol. I, 2nd edn (London, 1873).Google Scholar
Tyndall, John, Fragments of Science: vol. II, 6th edn (New York, 1905).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tyrrell, G.N.M., Apparitions, rev. edn (London, 1953).Google Scholar
Vande Kemp, Hendrika, ‘Psycho-spiritual Dreams in the Nineteenth Century, Part I: Dreams of Death’, Journal of Psychology and Theology 22:2 (1994), 97–108.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Vande Kemp, Hendrika‘Psycho-spiritual Dreams in the Nineteenth Century, Part II: Metaphysics and Immortality’, Journal of Psychology and Theology 22:2 (1994), 109–19.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Eeden, Frederick, ‘A Study of Dreams’, Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research 26 (1912–1913), 431–61.Google Scholar
Ruler, Han, ‘Minds, Forms, and Spirits: The Nature of Cartesian Disenchantment’, Journal of the History of Ideas 61:3 (2000), 381–95.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Venn, John, The Logic of Chance: An Essay on the Foundations and Province of the Theory of Probability, with Especial Reference to its Logical Bearings and Its Application to Moral and Social Science, and to Statistics, 3rd edn (London and New York, 1888).Google Scholar
Vernant, Jean-Pierre, Myth and Thought among the Greeks (London, 1983).Google Scholar
Vincent, David, ‘The Decline of the Oral Tradition in Popular Culture’, in Popular Culture and Custom in Nineteenth-century England, ed. Storch, Robert D. (London and New York, 1982), pp.20–47.Google Scholar
Viollet, Marcel, Spiritism and Insanity (London, 1910).Google Scholar
Wagner, Richard, Beethoven, trans. Dannreuther, Edward (London, 1880).Google Scholar
Walker, Mary, ‘Between Fiction and Madness: The Relationship of Women to the Supernatural in Late Victorian Britain’, in That Gentle Strength: Historical Perspectives on Women in Christianity, ed. Coon, Lynda L., Haldane, Katherine J. and Sommer, Elisabeth W. (Charlottesville, 1990), pp.230–42.Google Scholar
Walkowitz, Judith R., ‘Science and the Seance: Transgressions of Gender and Genre in Late Victorian London’, Representations 22 (1988), 3–29.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wallace, Alfred Russel, On Miracles and Modern Spiritualism (London, 2000).Google Scholar
Wallace, Alfred Russel‘The Psychological Curiosities of Scepticism. A Reply to Dr. Carpenter’, Fraser's Magazine for Town & Country 16 (1877), 694–706.Google Scholar
Walton, James, ‘On the Attribution of “Mrs. Veal”’, Notes and Queries 54:1 (2007), 60–2.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Warner, Marina, Phantasmagoria: Spirit Visions, Metaphors, and Media into the Twenty-first Century (Oxford, 2006).Google Scholar
Weatherly, Lionel A. and Maskelyne, J.N., The Supernatural? With Chapter on Oriental Magic, Spiritualism, and Theosophy (London, 2000).Google Scholar
Weaver, Zofia, ‘Daniel Dunglas Home Revisited – Evidence Old and New: An Essay Review of Knock, Knock, Knock! Who's There?’, Journal of the Society for Psychical Research 72 (2008), 222–30.Google Scholar
Weed, Sarah C., Hallam, Florence M. and Phinney, Emma D., ‘A Study of the Dream-consciousness’, American Journal of Psychology 7:3 (1896), 405–11.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Weightman, Mary, The Friendly Monitor; or, Dialogues for Youth Against the Fear of Ghosts, and Other Irrational Apprehensions etc. (London, 1791).Google Scholar
Weissberg, Liliane, Geistersprache: Philosophischer und Literarischer Diskurs im Späten Achtzehnten Jahrhundert (Würzburg, 1990).Google Scholar
Wells, H.G. ‘Peculiarities of Psychical Research’, Nature (6 December 1894), 121–2.
Weninger, Francis Xavier, Protestantism and Infidelity: An Appeal to Candid Americans, 10th edn (New York, 1865).Google Scholar
West, D. J., ‘A Mass-Observation Questionnaire on Hallucinations’, Journal of the Society for Psychical Research 34 (1948), 187–95.Google Scholar
‘What Is a Spook?’, Saturday Review of Politics, Literature, Science, and Art 62 (1886), 773.
Whiting, Lilian, ‘Do Spirits See Material Objects?’, Light: A Journal Devoted to the Highest Interests of Humanity, Both Here and Hereafter (1881–1883); Light: A Journal of Psychical, Occult, and Mystical Research (1883–) 17 (31 July 1897), 368–9.Google Scholar
Wigan, Arthur L., A New View of Insanity. The Duality of the Mind etc. (London, 1844).Google Scholar
Wilkinson, Alan, The Church of England and the First World War (London, 1978).Google Scholar
Wilkinson, Lynn R., The Dream of an Absolute Language: Emanuel Swedenborg and French Literary Culture (New York, 1996).Google Scholar
Williams, Charles, Spiritualism and Insanity: An Essay Describing the Disastrous Consequences to the Mental Health, Which Are Apt to Result from a Pursuit of the Study of Spiritualism (London, 1910).Google Scholar
Williams, John Peregrine, ‘The Making of Victorian Psychical Research: An Intellectual Elite's Approach to the Spiritual World’, PhD thesis, 1984, University of Cambridge.Google Scholar
Wilson, Neil, Shadows in the Attic: A Guide to British Supernatural Fiction, 1820–1950 (Boston Spa and London, 2000).Google Scholar
Winkelman, Michael, ‘Spirits as Human Nature and the Fundamental Structures of Consciousness’, in From Shaman to Scientist: Essays on Humanity's Search for Spirits, ed. Houran, James (Lanham, 2004), pp.59–96.Google Scholar
Winslow, L. S. Forbes, ‘Spiritualistic Madness’ (London, 1876).Google Scholar
Winter, Alison, Mesmerized: Powers of Mind in Victorian Britain (Chicago and London, 1998).Google Scholar
Winter, Jay, Sites of Memory, Sites of Mourning: The Great War in European Cultural History (Cambridge, 1995).Google Scholar
Wolffram, Heather, ‘Parapsychology on the Couch: The Psychology of Occult Belief in Germany, c.1870–1939’, Journal of the History of the Behavioral Sciences 42:3 (2006), 237–60.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wolfreys, Julian, Victorian Hauntings: Spectrality, Gothic, the Uncanny and Literature (Basingstoke, 2002).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wundt, Wilhelm, Lectures on Human and Animal Psychology, trans. Creighton, J.E. and Titchener, E. B. (London, 1901).Google Scholar
,‘X’, ‘The Telepathic Theory’, Light: A Journal Devoted to the Highest Interests of Humanity, Both Here and Hereafter (1881–1883); Light: A Journal of Psychical, Occult, and Mystical Research (1883–) 5 (14 March 1885), 121–2.
‘X.P.’, ‘Believers and Disbelievers; or, Who are the Fools?’, The Zoist: A Journal of Cerebral Physiology and Mesmerism, and Their Application to Human Welfare 4 (1846–1847), 435–47.
Zerffi, Gustavus George, Dreams and Ghosts. A Lecture Delivered before the Sunday Lecture Society, on Sunday Afternoon, 7th February, 1875 (London, 1875).Google Scholar
Zerffi, Gustavus GeorgeSpiritualism and Animal Magnetism (London, 1873).Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure coreplatform@cambridge.org is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

  • Bibliography
  • Shane McCorristine, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität Munchen
  • Book: Spectres of the Self
  • Online publication: 05 August 2012
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511779749.009
Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

  • Bibliography
  • Shane McCorristine, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität Munchen
  • Book: Spectres of the Self
  • Online publication: 05 August 2012
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511779749.009
Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

  • Bibliography
  • Shane McCorristine, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität Munchen
  • Book: Spectres of the Self
  • Online publication: 05 August 2012
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511779749.009
Available formats
×