ABSTRACT

This book resituates the ghost story as a matter of literary hospitality and as part of a vital prehistory of modernism, seeing it not as a quaint neo-gothic ornament, but as a powerful literary response to the technological and psychological disturbances that marked the end of the Victorian era. Linking little-studied authors like M. R. James and May Sinclair to such canonical figures as Dickens, Henry James, Woolf, and Joyce, Thurston argues that the literary ghost should be seen as no mere relic of gothic style but as a portal of discovery, an opening onto the central modernist problem of how to write ‘life itself.’ Ghost stories are split between an ironic, often parodic reference to Gothic style and an evocation of ‘life itself,’ an implicit repudiation of all literary style. Reading the ghost story as both a guest and a host story, this book traces the ghost as a disruptive figure in the ‘hospitable’ space of narrative from Maturin, Poe and Dickens to the fin de siècle, and then on into the twentieth century.

chapter |8 pages

Prologue

Beyond My Notation

part |45 pages

Part I Literary Hospitality

chapter |20 pages

2 Zigzag

The Signalman

part |41 pages

Part II Guests Ghosts

chapter |16 pages

3 Broken Lineage

chapter |23 pages

4 Ineffaceable Life

part |67 pages

Part III Hosts of the Living

chapter |28 pages

5 A Loop in a Mesh

May Sinclair

chapter |18 pages

6 Distant Music

chapter |5 pages

Conclusion

The Ghostly Path