All Stories

  1. The Magical Imagination: Magic and Modernity in Urban England 1780–1914. By Karl Bell
  2. A manuscript history of the Franklin family by Sophia Cracroft (1853)
  3. The Spectral Presence of the Franklin Expedition in Contemporary Fiction
  4. Searching for Franklin: a contemporary Canadian ghost story
  5. Exploring Cultural History: Essays in Honour of Peter Burke. Edited by MelissaCalaresu, FilippodeVivo and Joan‐PauRubiés. Ashgate. 2010. xvi + 376pp. £70.00.
  6. Polar imperative: a history of Arctic sovereignty in North America
  7. Ludic Terrorism: The Game of Anarchism in Some Edwardian Fiction
  8. Ghostly relations: the aunt-figure in the fiction of Walter de la Mare
  9. Review Essay
  10. Ghost hands, hands of glory, and manumission in the fiction of Sheridan Le Fanu
  11. May the Best Man Win: Sport, Masculinity, and Nationalism in Great Britain and the Empire, 1880-1935Patrick F. McDevitt. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2004. 192 pp. $27.95 (paperback).
  12. May the Best Man Win: Sport, Masculinity, and Nationalism in Great Britain and the Empire, 1880-1935 Patrick F. McDevitt. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2004. 192 pp. $27.95 (paperback).
  13. Spectres of the Self: Thinking about Ghosts and Ghost-Seeing in England, 1750–1920
  14. The Haunted: A Social History of Ghosts
  15. Enchanted Modernism: “Magical Thinking: a Symposium,” University of London, May 11-12, 2007
  16. Appendix
  17. Introduction
  18. Bibliography
  19. The haunted mind, 1750–1850
  20. Seeing is believing: hallucinations and ghost-seeing
  21. Ghost-hunting in the Society for Psychical Research
  22. Phantasms of the living and the dead
  23. The concept of hallucination in late Victorian psychology
  24. Epilogue: towards 1920