In which an examination of M.R. James’ approach to writing ghost stories leads to a distinction between two ways of thinking about the past, the first being a parallel to Edward Said’s Orientalism – a way of treating the past as an exotic and mysterious ‘Other’ – the second, viewing the past as continuous with and persisting into the present, the present as containing palimpsests or time capsules that allow us access to the past.
Music by
Sharron Kraus, with
Harriet Earis and Guy Whittaker
REFERENCES
Mark Fisher,
The Weird and the Eerie
M.R. James,
Collected Ghost Stories
‘Ghosts – Treat Them Gently’
The League of Gentlemen
Edward Said,
Orientalism
Penelope Lively,
The House at Norham Gardens
The Ghost of Thomas Kempe
The Presence of the Past
Charles Butler,
Four British Fantasists
Rob Young,
Electric Eden: Unearthing Britain’s Visionary Music
‘The Pattern Under the Plough’
Detectorists