Kyle Falcon
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A war of sensation
Telepathy, crisis apparitions and the moment of death on the home front
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This chapter uses crisis apparitions – the vision of someone’s ghost at the moment of their death – and telepathic experiences to probe the emotional networks established between soldiers and their families. These experiences were widespread across the British Empire at the turn of the century and during the war because of a range of technological, cultural and demographic contexts. It argues that the supernormal paradigm offered Britons a means to frame their subjective emotional experiences into objective scientific knowledge via the SPR’s telepathic theories, allowing them to validate and negotiate various emotional and cultural crises. It also advances two other arguments: that psychical research originated out of the same circles and intellectual context as psychotherapy, and that a belief in telepathy was also a gateway into spiritualism.

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Haunted Britain

Spiritualism, psychical research and the Great War

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