Chant to Summon a Ghost
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Urban Legends
Jestice/English 1 Urban Legends An urban legend, urban myth, urban tale, or contemporary legend is a form of modern folklore consisting of stories that may or may not have been believed by their tellers to be true. As with all folklore and mythology, the designation suggests nothing about the story's veracity, but merely that it is in circulation, exhibits variation over time, and carries some significance that motivates the community in preserving and propagating it. Despite its name, an urban legend does not necessarily originate in an urban area. Rather, the term is used to differentiate modern legend from traditional folklore in pre-industrial times. For this reason, sociologists and folklorists prefer the term contemporary legend. Urban legends are sometimes repeated in news stories and, in recent years, distributed by e-mail. People frequently allege that such tales happened to a "friend of a friend"; so often, in fact, that "friend of a friend has become a commonly used term when recounting this type of story. Some urban legends have passed through the years with only minor changes to suit regional variations. One example is the story of a woman killed by spiders nesting in her elaborate hairdo. More recent legends tend to reflect modern circumstances, like the story of people ambushed, anesthetized, and waking up minus one kidney, which was surgically removed for transplantation--"The Kidney Heist." The term “urban legend,” as used by folklorists, has appeared in print since at least 1968. Jan Harold Brunvand, professor of English at the University of Utah, introduced the term to the general public in a series of popular books published beginning in 1981. -
Reader Agency and Intimacy in Contemporary Horror Fiction
“This Is Not For You” Reader Agency and Intimacy in Contemporary Horror Fiction Aslak Rustad Hauglid A Thesis Presented to The Department of Literature, Area Studies and European Languages In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements For the Master of Arts Degree UNIVERSITETET I OSLO Spring 2016 II “This Is Not For You” Reader Agency and Intimacy in Contemporary Horror Fiction Aslak Rustad Hauglid A Thesis Presented to The Department of Literature, Area Studies and European Languages University of Oslo In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements For the Master of Arts Degree Spring 2016 III © Aslak Rustad Hauglid 2016 “This Is Not For You”: Reader Agency and Intimacy in Contemporary Horror Fiction Aslak Rustad Hauglid http://www.duo.uio.no/ Print: Reprosentralen, Universitetet i Oslo IV Abstract This thesis examines how recent/contemporary horror fiction uses the establishment of reader intimacy and challenges to reader agency in order to create experiences of horror. The discussion focuses on a selection of horror texts from different media published between 2000 and 2016. The thesis argues that these two techniques have come to be increasingly important horror tropes over this period, and examines how they are applied in order to propose a new perspective for understanding how contemporary horror operates. Two central arguments structure this discussion. The first argument is a claim that the aesthetic, narrative and in some case interactive dimensions of the examined horror texts illustrate how these texts seek to shorten the distance between reader and author, while simultaneously questioning the power the reader possesses in relation to the text. All of this takes place in the pursuit of creating an effective experience of horror. -
Fortean Times 338
THE X-FILES car-crash politics jg ballard versus ronald reagan cave of the witches south america's magical murders they're back: is the truth still out there? phantom fares japan's ghostly cab passengers THE WORLD’S THE WORLD OF STRANGE PHENOMENA WWW.FORTEANTiMES.cOM FORTEAN TiMES 338 chimaera cats • death by meteorite • flat earth rapper • ancient greek laptop WEIRDES NEWS T THE WORLD OF STRANGE PHENOMENA www.forteantimes.com ft338 march 2016 £4.25 THE SEcRET HiSTORy OF DAviD bOWiE • RETuRN OF THE x-FiLES • cAvE OF THE WiTcHES • AuTOMATic LEPREcHAuNSP • jAPAN'S GHOST ACE ODDITY from aliens to the occult: the strange fascinations of daVid b0Wie FA RES bogey beasts the shape-shifting monsters of british folklore mystery moggies on the trail of alien big MAR 2016 cats in deepest suffolk Fortean Times 338 strange days Japan’s phantom taxi fares, John Dee’s lost library, Indian claims death by meteorite, cretinous criminals, curious cats, Harry Price traduced, ancient Greek laptop, Flat Earth rapper, CONTENTS ghostly photobombs, bogey beasts – and much more. 05 THE CONSPIRASPHERE 23 MYTHCONCEPTIONS 05 EXTRA! EXTRA! 24 NECROLOG the world of strange phenomena 15 ALIEN ZOO 25 FAIRIES & FORTEANA 16 GHOSTWATCH 26 THE UFO FILES features COVER STORY 28 THE MAGE WHO SOLD THE WORLD From an early interest in UFOs and Aleister Crowley to fl irtations with Kabbalah and Nazi mysticism, David Bowie cultivated a number of esoteric interests over the years and embraced alien and occult imagery in his costumes, songs and videos. DEAN BALLINGER explores the fortean aspects and influences of the late musician’s career. -
Video Gaming and Death
Untitled. Photographer: Pawel Kadysz (https://stocksnap.io/photo/OZ4IBMDS8E). Special Issue Video Gaming and Death edited by John W. Borchert Issue 09 (2018) articles Introduction to a Special Issue on Video Gaming and Death by John W. Borchert, 1 Death Narratives: A Typology of Narratological Embeddings of Player's Death in Digital Games by Frank G. Bosman, 12 No Sympathy for Devils: What Christian Video Games Can Teach Us About Violence in Family-Friendly Entertainment by Vincent Gonzalez, 53 Perilous and Peril-Less Gaming: Representations of Death with Nintendo’s Wolf Link Amiibo by Rex Barnes, 107 “You Shouldn’t Have Done That”: “Ben Drowned” and the Uncanny Horror of the Haunted Cartridge by John Sanders, 135 Win to Exit: Perma-Death and Resurrection in Sword Art Online and Log Horizon by David McConeghy, 170 Death, Fabulation, and Virtual Reality Gaming by Jordan Brady Loewen, 202 The Self Across the Gap of Death: Some Christian Constructions of Continued Identity from Athenagoras to Ratzinger and Their Relevance to Digital Reconstitutions by Joshua Wise, 222 reviews Graveyard Keeper. A Review by Kathrin Trattner, 250 interviews Interview with Dr. Beverley Foulks McGuire on Video-Gaming, Buddhism, and Death by John W. Borchert, 259 reports Dying in the Game: A Perceptive of Life, Death and Rebirth Through World of Warcraft by Wanda Gregory, 265 Perilous and Peril-Less Gaming: Representations of Death with Nintendo’s Wolf Link Amiibo Rex Barnes Abstract This article examines the motif of death in popular electronic games and its imaginative applications when employing the Wolf Link Amiibo in The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild (2017). -
LEASK-DISSERTATION-2020.Pdf (1.565Mb)
WRAITHS AND WHITE MEN: THE IMPACT OF PRIVILEGE ON PARANORMAL REALITY TELEVISION by ANTARES RUSSELL LEASK DISSERTATION Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy at The University of Texas at Arlington August, 2020 Arlington, Texas Supervising Committee: Timothy Morris, Supervising Professor Neill Matheson Timothy Richardson Copyright by Antares Russell Leask 2020 Leask iii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS • I thank my Supervising Committee for being patient on this journey which took much more time than expected. • I thank Dr. Tim Morris, my Supervising Professor, for always answering my emails, no matter how many years apart, with kindness and understanding. I would also like to thank his demon kitten for providing the proper haunted atmosphere at my defense. • I thank Dr. Neill Matheson for the ghostly inspiration of his Gothic Literature class and for helping me return to the program. • I thank Dr. Tim Richardson for using his class to teach us how to write a conference proposal and deliver a conference paper – knowledge I have put to good use! • I thank my high school senior English teacher, Dr. Nancy Myers. It’s probably an urban legend of my own creating that you told us “when you have a Ph.D. in English you can talk to me,” but it has been a lifetime motivating force. • I thank Dr. Susan Hekman, who told me my talent was being able to use pop culture to explain philosophy. It continues to be my superpower. • I thank Rebecca Stone Gordon for the many motivating and inspiring conversations and collaborations. • I thank Tiffany A. -
Japanese Demon Lore Noriko T
Utah State University DigitalCommons@USU All USU Press Publications USU Press 1-1-2010 Japanese Demon Lore Noriko T. Reider [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.usu.edu/usupress_pubs Part of the Cultural History Commons, and the Folklore Commons Recommended Citation Reider, N. T. (2010). Japanese demon lore: Oni, from ancient times to the present. Logan, Utah: Utah State University Press. This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the USU Press at DigitalCommons@USU. It has been accepted for inclusion in All USU Press Publications by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@USU. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Japanese Demon Lore Oni from Ancient Times to the Present Japanese Demon Lore Oni from Ancient Times to the Present Noriko T. Reider U S U P L, U Copyright © 2010 Utah State University Press All rights reserved Utah State University Press Logan, Utah 84322 Cover: Artist Unknown, Japanese; Minister Kibi’s Adventures in China, Scroll 2 (detail); Japanese, Heian period, 12th century; Handscroll; ink, color, and gold on paper; 32.04 x 458.7 cm (12 5/8 x 180 9/16 in.); Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; William Sturgis Bigelow Collection, by exchange, 32.131.2. ISBN: 978-0-87421-793-3 (cloth) IISBN: 978-0-87421-794-0 (e-book) Manufactured in the United States of America Printed on acid-free, recycled paper Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Reider, Noriko T. Japanese demon lore : oni from ancient times to the present / Noriko T. Reider. -
Climate Control
Jail Mailer, p.08 + FUZZ BUZZ, p.11 + NORTHWEST BOOKSHELF, p.12 cascadia REPORTING FROM THE HEART OF CASCADIA WHATCOM*SKAGIT*ISLAND COUNTIES PICKFORD CALENDAR INSIDE 12-07-2016 • ISSUE:49 • V.11 Torrey Clyde Petersen's Pines labor of love, P.24 RIVER ROSTER CLIMATE TheThe eagleseagles havehave landed,landed, P.14P.14 CONTROL ENTERTAINING EDUCATION A BATTLE AGAINST TheThe BellinghamBellingham FolkFolk Festival,Festival, P.20P.20 GREAT ODDS, P.06 34 cascadia SATURDAY [12.10.16] FOOD FOOD ThisWeek ONSTAGE Holiday Magic Show: 11am, 2pm and 5pm, Walton A glance at this week’s Theatre 27 Pippi Longstocking: 2pm and 7pm, BAAY Theatre happenings A Night of Drama: 7pm, Explorations Academy White Christmas: 7:30pm, Bellingham Theatre Guild B-BOARD B-BOARD The Happy Elf: 7:30pm, Claire vg Thomas Theatre A Christmas Story: 7:30pm, Lincoln Theatre The Best Christmas Pageant Ever: 7:30pm, Ana- 24 cortes Community Theatre My Three Ghosts: 8pm, Upfront Theatre FILM Holiday Games Galore: 10pm, Upfront Theatre DANCE 20 Winter Wonderland: 1pm, Nooksack High School North Pole Express: 4pm, Bellingham Sportsplex MUSIC The Nutcracker: 7pm, Anacortes High School 18 MUSIC Wear a holiday- Bellingham Folk Festival: 9am-9:30pm, BUF ART Holiday Jewels: 1pm, McIntyre Hall themed costume Kulshan Chorus: 7:30pm, Bellingham High School 16 Skagit Valley Chorale: 7:30pm, McIntyre Hall for the Arthritis COMMUNITY STAGE Foundation’s Holiday Faire: 10am-3pm, Whatcom Hills Waldorf School 14 annual Jingle Bell Winter Wonderland: 10am-9pm, Children’s Museum of Skagit County -
Foaftale News Newsletter of the International Society
FOAFTALE NEWS NEWSLETTER OF THE INTERNATIONAL SOCIETY FOR CONTEMPORARY LEGEND RESEARCH No. 71 January 2009 ISCLR Conference Announcement IN THIS ISSUE PERSPECTIVES ON CONTEMPORARY LEGEND From the Incoming Editor International Society for Contemporary Legend Research Twenty-seventh International Conference Baddeck, Nova Scotia, Canada ISCLR Conference Announcement: June 3-7, 2009 Baddeck, Cape Breton, June 3-7, 2009 The International Society for Contemporary Legend Prize Announcements Research is pleased to announce that the 2009 Perspectives on Contemporary Legend Twenty-seventh “A Bag of Cookies”: An Illustrated International Conference is to be held at the Inverary Resort in Baddeck, Cape Breton, Nova Scotia, summer Internet Forward home of Alexander Graham Bell and site of the first Jan Harold Brunvand powered flight in the Commonwealth. Texting the Dead Proposals for papers on all aspects of “contemporary,” Publorians/The Editor “urban,” or “modern” legend research are sought, as are those on any legend or legend-like tradition that circulate actively at present or have circulated at an earlier Penis Shrinkers in West Africa historical period. Previous discussions have ranged in Elizabeth Tucker focus from the ancient to the modern (including Internet- lore) and have covered diverse cultures worldwide Global Links (including our own academic world). Brian Chapman The 2009 meeting will be organized as a series of seminars at which the majority of those who attend will Book Reviews present papers and/or contribute to discussion sessions. Concurrent sessions will be avoided so that all Publishers’ Abstracts participants can hear all the papers. Proposals for special panels of papers, discussion sessions, and other related Reminder: Membership Dues for 2009 events are encouraged. -
Evolution of the Youtube Personas Related to Survival Horror Games
Toniolo EVOLUTION OF THE YOUTUBE PERSONAS RELATED TO SURVIVAL HORROR GAMES FRANCESCO TONIOLO CATHOLIC UNIVERSITY OF MILAN ABSTRACT The indie survival horror game genre has given rise to some of the most famous game streamers on YouTube, especially titles likes Amnesia: The Dark Descent (Frictional Games 2010), Slender: The Eight Pages (Parsec Productions 2012), and Five Nights at Freddy’s (Scott Cawthon 2014). The games are strongly focused on horror tropes including jump scares and defenceless protagonists, which lend them to displays of overemphasised emotional reactions by YouTubers, who use them to build their online personas in a certain way. This paper retraces the evolution of the relationship between horror games and YouTube personas, with attention to in-game characters and gameplay mechanics on the one hand and the practices of prominent YouTube personas on the other. It will show how the horror game genre and related media, including “Let’s play” videos, animated fanvids, and “creepypasta” stories have influenced prominent YouTuber personas and resulted in some changes in the common processes of persona formation on the platform. KEY WORDS Survival Horror; Video Game; YouTube; Creepypasta; Fanvid; Let’s Play INTRODUCTION Marshall & Barbour (2015, p. 7) argue that “Game culture consciously moves the individual into a zone of production and constitution of public identity”. Similarly, scholars have studied – with different foci and levels of analysis – the relationships between gamers and avatars in digital worlds or in tabletop games by using the concept of “persona” (McMahan 2003; Waskul & Lust 2004; Isbister 2006; Frank 2012). Often, these scholars were concerned with online video games such as World of Warcraft (Filiciak 2003; Milik 2017) or famous video game icons like Lara Croft from the Tomb Raider series (McMahan 2008). -
Pandemonium and Parade
Pandemonium and Parade Pandemonium and Parade Japanese Monsters and the Culture of YOkai Michael Dylan Foster UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA PRESS Berkeley . Los Angeles . London University of California Press, one of the most distinguished university presses in the United States, enriches lives around the world by advancing scholarship in the humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences. Its activities are supported by the UC Press Foundation and by philanthropic contributions from individuals and institutions. For more information, visit www.ucpress.edu. Frontispiece and title-page art: Details from Kawanabe KyOsai, HyakkiyagyO-zu: Biwa o ou otoko, c. 1879. Ink and color on paper. © Copyright the Trustees of The British Museum. Excerpt from Molloy, by Samuel Beckett, copyright © 1955 by Grove Press, Inc. Used by permission of Grove/Atlantic, Inc., and Faber and Faber Ltd., © The Estate of Samuel Beckett. An earlier version of chapter 3 appeared as Michael Dylan Foster, “Strange Games and Enchanted Science: The Mystery of Kokkuri,” Journal of Asian Studies 65, no. 2 (May 2006): 251–75, © 2006 by the Associ- ation for Asian Studies, Inc. Reprinted with permission. Some material from chapter 5 has appeared previously in Michael Dylan Foster, “The Question of the Slit-Mouthed Woman: Contemporary Legend, the Beauty Industry, and Women’s Weekly Magazines in Japan,” Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society 32, no. 3 (Spring 2007): 699–726, © 2007 by The University of Chicago. Parts of chapter 5 have also appeared in Michael Dylan Foster, “The Otherworlds of Mizuki Shigeru,” in Mechademia, vol. 3, Limits of the Human, ed. Frenchy Lunning (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2008). -
The Vanishing Hitchhiker in Shillong Khasi Belief Narratives and Violence Against Women
Margaret Lyngdoh University of Tartu, Estonia The Vanishing Hitchhiker in Shillong Khasi Belief Narratives and Violence Against Women This article on the vanishing hitchhiker theme explores how an international narrative has generated a locally constructed set of orally transmitted narra- tives. The narratives derive from the framework of traditional belief systems among the Khasi community in northeastern India and incorporate within them Western conceptions of hauntings and beliefs about the restless dead. The article also attempts to examine how this narrative critiques paradigm shifts in the socioeconomic structures that are dependent on government pol- icies and infrastructural development. Alongside this analysis, the article fur- ther explores how the urban legend is supported by the living Khasic system of belief and social reality. keywords: vanishing hitchhiker—belief narratives—matrilineal society— urban legends—restless dead Asian Ethnology Volume 71, Number 2 • 2012, 207–224 © Nanzan Institute for Religion and Culture On 6 September 2002, a twenty-three-year-old pregnant woman was killed by her husband; on 8 January 2008 he was sentenced to life imprisonment.1 Soon afterwards, the story of a young woman hailing taxis, and then vanishing mysteriously from them, began to make the rounds in Shillong. his study of the vanishing hitchhiker theme, paradoxically set in a country Twhere hitchhiking is virtually unknown, will try to demonstrate how this popular international legend has generated a locally constructed set of metafolk- lore that derives from the framework of traditional Khasi beliefs. This framework of beliefs incorporates within it the predominately Western conceptions of how hauntings should be (Carrol 2006; Davies 2007; Finucane 1982; Jones 1968). -
Slicing Through Spooky, but Fake, Urban Legends LET's GET REAL SCARY STORIES ARE COMMON TRICKS
Slicing through spooky, but fake, urban legends LET'S GET REAL SCARY STORIES A... Page 1 of 4 Print this Page Return to story Slicing through spooky, but fake, urban legends LET'S GET REAL SCARY STORIES ARE COMMON TRICKS October 26, 2007 12:36 am BY EDIE GROSS BY EDIE GROSS OK, so the craziest thing happened to a guy my hairdresser's husband works with. He was in South America on business and decided to unwind in the hotel bar after a long day of meetings. He remembers sipping a mojito at the bar while chatting with some locals--and then waking up the next morning in his hotel bathtub covered in ice. For decades, urban legends have paired Halloween treats and razor blades, needles, He called the authorities, who rushed him to a local hospital. And poison. They prey on common there, he found out one of his kidneys had been removed! 'stranger danger' fears. Can you believe that? Well, sort of. That tiny bit of believability--after all, surgeons remove kidneys all the time, albeit usually with the donor's permission--is what makes the tale an enduring urban legend. And a scary one at that. "The things that make urban legends last, it's the emotional impact and the plausibility," said David Emery, who writes about urban myths for About.com. "If it's just believable enough, people buy into it, and if people buy into it, they're likely to tell it." The kidney-theft myth has been circulating on the Internet for at least 10 years, but has probably been around longer than that.