Please click here for the Spring Fling Blog Hop Giveaway!
I'm very pleased to welcome guest author
Laura Bickle
to the blog today!
Take it away, Laura...
Talking with the dead isn’t a new
pursuit.
I’ve always been curious about how
it happens, from both historical and modern perspectives. In my Anya Kalinczyk
books, my ghost-hunting protagonist is the rarest form of spiritual medium, a
Lantern. Where other mediums in her world allow spirits to use their hands and voices to communicate, Anya devours and incinerates
them. As you can imagine, there was a lot of fun research that went into the
story about ghost hunting and mediums. I was intrigued by how conversing with
ghosts has changed – and also remained the same – over time.
Modern ghost hunting involves
investigating haunted sites in search of proof of life beyond death. Ghost
hunters and other paranormal investigators often attempt to record data from
their experiences using a variety of equipment beyond personal anecdotes. Such
investigations can make use of EMF meters, thermometers, cameras, motion
detectors, and audio recordings to capture evidence of paranormal activity.
There’s a plethora of new evidence-collection devices available, with more
invented and adapted as time goes on.
With all the technology used by
ghost hunters and the recent popularity of such investigations, it may seem
that such activities are a new phenomenon. In fact, organized attempts to
contact ghosts have their roots in Spiritualism, a movement that peaked in
popularity between the 1840s and the 1920s. As a belief system, Spiritualism
assumed that spirits of the dead could be contacted by humans. Spiritualism
relied on mediums, living people who have the special ability to communicate
with spirits, to bring the words and deeds of the dead to the masses.
In 1848, two sisters, Kate and
Margaret Fox, claimed to contact spirits through rapping noises. The experience
of rapping by their audiences was considered to be vivid evidence at the time.
Their experiences and the experiences of other mediums in the movement sparked
widespread public interest in the afterlife. Seances, table-tipping, Ouija
boards, and automatic writing became popular entertainment, even parlor games
at parties. Communication with the dead became democratized, in a sense. It
could be witnessed by ordinary people.
The movement began to wane under
accusations of fraud. In the 1920s, stage magicians such as Harry Houdini
campaigned to expose mediums defrauding grieving families. As analysis began to
replace belief, many efforts to contact spirits were exposed as delusional or
predatory.
Still, the interest in life after
death is perennial; across cultures, it‘s a topic for philosophers and
theologians. But the Spiritualist movement brought the search to the masses.
Ordinary people were able to touch and see evidence of an afterlife for
themselves.
Modern ghost hunters are the heirs
of much of those grass-roots efforts. Ghost hunters come from all walks of
life, and are ordinary people with an interest in the afterlife. But we now
live in a scientific age. Armed with technological tools, many ghost hunters
depart from Spiritualists by embracing skepticism, rather than blind belief in
things that go bump in the dark. By embracing scientific methods, such
investigators are likely to come closer to the truth than the Spiritualists
that came before.
The curiosity is the same, but the
methods have changed. Rather than seeing contacting spirits as a game, modern
ghost hunting views contact with the dead as an investigation, worthy of
measurement and accumulation of evidence, not as a form of entertainment. As a
result, we may come closer to answers, answers that curious people a century
before could only speculate about.
Oooh, so interesting! Hey, guys, do you have any good ghost stories from your own life? If so, do tell! And please thank Laura for such an intriguing post!
Thanks for reading!
Laura & Laura

7 comments:
Thanks so much for hosting me today!
Thanks for this interesting post. Is it a coincidence I got your books in the mail today? Dark Oracle and Rogue Oracle.
I am very glad not to have any personal encounters with ghosts, but sometimes there is too much coincidence in my life. So I do believe there is more between heaven and earth than what we can see. Which is one of the reasons I love reading paranormal romance books and urban fantasy.
Glad to have you, Laura! And thanks, Aurian, for kicking off the comments! I've had SO MANY encounters of the ghostly type, so I really enjoyed this post! :)
I'm another laura! These books sound really good and I can;t resist a series. Add in some ghosts and mediums and I am hooked. I'll get my hands on these soon, looking forward to reviewing them!
laura thomas
Thanks so much for trying my books, Aurian! I agree that there are many things on heaven and earth...far more than we can express in fiction!
Thanks, Laura! Would love to hear about your ghostly encounters!
Laura Thomas, thanks so much for including me in your TBR list! I hope that you enjoy! :-)
Wow! This might be the most Lauras ever to comment on one of my blog posts! LOL
Oh, my, Laura, I have SO many ghost stories. I'm 100% confident I've seen two ghosts - one at the age of 8 that appeared human but filmy, one at the age of 17 that I thought was a real person, an older neighbor lady who'd been in the hospital for two weeks before but had died the morning I saw her still in the hospital. There are dozens of hauntings stories from my family, and ghosts were a regular topic of conversation around my grandmother's dining room table when we all gathered. Cool, huh?
Laura, that is SO INCREDIBLY cool! I love hearing real life ghost stories! :-D
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