Kyle Falcon
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Living with the ghosts of war
Death and mourning in the séance room
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This chapter uses records contained in the SPR’s archives to shed light on the social function and nature of séances during and after the Great War. It argues that communion with the dead offered social, emotional and cultural stability for the bereaved. Soldiers’ spirits reverted to familiar domestic and gendered dynamics as they assisted in the mourning process. This chapter advances others’ arguments that spiritualism was an alternative form of therapy before mainstream psychoanalysis. The ghosts that haunted seances across Britain, however, were far more uplifting and positive than the kinds that traumatised soldiers such as Sassoon.

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Haunted Britain

Spiritualism, psychical research and the Great War

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