The Bruja Professor

A Brief History of Haunted Real Estate in Popular Culture

One of my favorite things about teaching a course about supernatural sleuths (aside from being able to teach a course on one of my favorite topics) is that, when I tell people I teach a class on ghostbusters and supernatural sleuths, most of them end up having a story about their brush with the supernatural. More often than not, their stories revolve around that time they lived in a house that was haunted or know someone who did. I don’t care how rational or “normal” some people might seem, when it comes to the topic of ghosts and the things that hunt them, well, the conversation inevitably takes a turn for the spooky—and fun.

The same phenomenon holds true when it comes to house hunting. Let’s face it—we’ve all checked out that apartment unit or seemingly ideal home and walked away feeling like something wasn’t right. We might have even experienced something uncanny or so strange our waking minds simply cannot process it. And it makes sense. Those are our intimate spaces, the places we go to get away from the world, our sanctuaries, ideally, where we are our freest…and most vulnerable.

That’s what makes the haunted house such a beloved horror story premise. They are the home—pun intended—of all our hopes and fears, mirrors to our social and psychological states. They’re also a reminder that there are those who have come before us and that we are sharing a space with them. And, let’s be real, homes absorb a lot of the energy of those who inhabit it, and that energy remains, for better or worse, long after the inhabitants have gone.

Whatever your feelings are on the possibility of spectral tenants in your own home, it’s worth looking at the (very brief and selective) history of haunted real estate in popular culture. Check out my video essay below to see how gothic romances, B horror movies, and monster-of-the-week TV shows have had a serious impact on real-world real estate and our perceptions of the haunted house setting, which has gone from terrifying to kind of cool. Enjoy!

The Bruja Professor, a witchy take on literature, the occult & pop culture, is the scholarly sister to Enchantment Learning & Living, an inspirational blog celebrating life’s simple pleasures, everyday mysticism, and delectable recipes that are guaranteed to stir the kitchen witch in you.

If you enjoyed what you just read and believe that stories are magic & true magic is in the everyday…or your next good read, subscribe to my newsletter below for regular doses of enchantment.

Want even more inspiration? Follow me on Instagram, Facebook, Pinterest, and Twitter. Here’s to a magical life!

Ghost Hunting Before the Victorians…with Tim Prasil

When it comes to occult detectives, ghostbusters, and monster hunters, the casual gothic appreciator can point to the Ghostbusters franchise, Buffy the Vampire Slayer or Supernatural…you know, the movies and shows that put monster hunting on the pop culture map. Or they can take the classic route via Bram Stoker’s Van Helsing, the parapsychologist and vampire hunter—and Dracula’s nemesis.  

But this genre of slayers and experts in all things spooky has a long history in literature and film, dating all the way back to the Victorian era, thanks to the Spiritualism movement and the budding mystery genre. What better way for Victorians to enjoy their love of the supernatural and literary detectives than to combine them in the figure of the supernatural sleuth? In fact, any connoisseur of the genre can find a treasure trove of wonderful tales involving ghost hunters and supernatural sleuths throughout the 1800s and into the 1900s, ranging from the spooky to the silly to the downright terrifying!  

And that’s not even getting into the history of real-life ghost hunters and occult practitioners that inspired this sub-genre of gothic literature. It should come as no surprise that our relationship to the unknown and the spirit realm is as common as it is timeless, which only leads us to conclude that the idea of ghost hunting must also predate the Victorian era.  Luckily, where there are paranormal investigators and investigators, there are also investigators of those paranormal activities, namely, scholars.  

One such literary historian, Tim Prasil, author of the Vera Van Slyke Ghostly Mystery series, was kind enough to walk us through some of the early histories of ghost hunting before the Victorians. He was kind enough to share an excerpt of his latest book, Certain Nocturnal Disturbances: Ghost Hunting Before the Victorians, that explores the world of paranormal investigators that predates what we’ve previously considered to be the starting point for the genre. In this excerpted introduction, Tim gives a brief overview of the origin of the term “ghost hunt” and the history of the early ghostbusters in fact and fiction.  Enjoy!

Introduction: Ghost Hunting Before the Victorians

The Victorian era began in 1837 and ended in 1901, the years that Queen Victoria ruled what was then called the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. In this time and in this place, the question of why ghosts have tantalized and baffled humanity across the globe for millennia garnered serious, scholarly attention. Among those voices calling for such study was Catherine Crowe, who gathered a wide variety of reports about supernatural and occult experiences, then organized them into a surprisingly popular book titled The Night Side of Nature; Or, Ghosts and Ghost Seers (1848). Meanwhile, around 1850, a number of Cambridge University students began to meet with the intention of examining reports of hauntings. Apparently, not much came of the project, but it inspired the more formal Ghost Club, founded in 1862—and this led to the Society for Psychical Research, founded in 1882. The latter two organizations still exist today, and neither has confined its focus to only ghosts. Along with mesmerism, clairvoyance, and similar topics, both groups were especially motivated to validate or debunk the phenomena occurring at Spiritualist séances.

Consider, too, the contribution the Victorians made to the literary ghost-story tradition with writers such as Charles Dickens (1812-1870), Sheridan Le Fanu (1814-1873), Charlotte Riddell (1832-1906), and Edith Nesbit (1858-1924). It’s little wonder, then, that in the early 2000s, we envision the ectoplasm of ghosts swirling with the fog of Ripper-era London and sense something charming—yet slightly chilling—in those cornices, cupulas, and other ornate flourishes of houses built during the 1800s. One might reasonably conclude that ghost hunting started in the Victorian era.

But there’s a substantial history to this noble quest that predates the Victorians. In fact, the term ghost hunt and its derivations ghost hunting and ghost hunter(s) appear in pre-1837 publications with some regularity. The longer I look, the farther back in time I go, but so far one of the earliest uses I’ve unearthed is in Elizabeth Gunning’s 1794 novel, The Packet. There, a character named Sir William Montreville interviews people who claim to have seen a specter at the local church. Though he’s skeptical, Sir William joins with his servant to form what Gunning calls a “ghost-hunting party.” Late at night, the duo patiently hide in one of the pews at the haunted site to conduct some nocturnal surveillance, the time-honored practice of ghost hunters. Other documents that use the term include 1804 newspaper and magazine articles about that year’s Hammersmith Ghost case (covered in Chapter Seven of this book), an 1808 play, an 1817 book about premature burial, and an 1820 family history. Remember that the term ghost hunt was quite likely spoken before written. Figure in any documents using it that have been lost or that remain untouched on dusty library shelves or in decaying trunks. With this in mind, I suspect various forms of ghost hunting were fairly well known with that label in Britain for about four or five decades before the Victorians.

Ghost hunting teams have a history that reaches back even further. They certainly looked differently than how we see them today on television, YouTube, and elsewhere, but Chapter Four addresses how assembling a committee to investigate claims of ghostly phenomena dates back at least to 1534. That’s the year Francis I, King of France, appointed a group—a mix of clergy and lay people—to investigate claims that a church graveyard in Orleans was haunted. One of the most famous paranormal investigative teams was assembled in 1762, when a ghost was purported to be visiting Cock Lane in London. I discuss this in Chapter Four.

Side note: You can also read more about it on Tim’s blog here.

All along, ghost hunters have had to position their work against those who insisted that phenomena being misinterpreted as supernatural or paranormal were, in actuality, entirely natural and pretty darned normal. Indeed, as we’ll see, many important ghost hunters were among those seeking to debunk a haunting. It’s misguided to assume that “everyone back then believed in ghosts,” a sweeping generalization often aimed at people in some vague part of the past. An example of this appeared in 1863, when George Cruikshank described people of a century-and-a-half earlier this way: “The gullibility of the public was much greater at that time than now, and they would swallow anything in the shape of a ghost.” As discussed in Chapter Three, Joseph Glanvill (1636-1680) was carefully debating such things about the time Cruikshank indicates. Even Pliny the Younger—a man born when years had only two digits and who died when they had three—retold the story of a ghost hunt to someone he knew might think it questionable, if not complete baloney. (This ancient investigation is discussed in Chapter One.) In other words, debates about whether or not ghosts are real seem to be almost as old as recorded encounters with them. It is as if disagreement is embedded into the DNA of humanity.

The opposition faced by those working to prove the existence of ghosts leads to the need for sound, convincing evidence. A conscious pursuit of exactly that also comes before the Victorians. The above-mentioned Glanvill was an investigator who strongly believed in interaction between the supernatural and natural realms, but who also valued reliable, firsthand testimony supporting the reality of that interaction. We’ll see that he applied this method to his investigation of a case commonly called “The Drummer of Tedworth.”

Even the notion of the purposeless ghost—a ghost with no clear mission for manifesting and no special message to convey—appears prior to the 1800s. This has been presented by some ghostlore scholars as something unique to the nineteenth-century. However, in Chapter Five, I make the case that the Hinton Ampner haunting of the late 1760s features exactly this kind of phenomena despite various attempts to make the haunting fit the traditional pattern of a ghost returning to, say, guide the living to a hidden deed or to serve as observable evidence of the cursed existence following a sinful life.

In a nutshell, then, ghost hunting—its key methods, its main challenges, even the term itself—all predate the Victorian era.


Defining “Ghost Hunter”

Side note: You can read more about this on Tim’s blog here.

Of course, all of this talk about pre-Victorian ghost hunting depends on clarification of who exactly constitutes a ghost hunter. The definition used in this book involves individuals who fit the following criteria:

  1. Ghost hunters are not themselves the haunted party. Rather, they learn of a stranger’s alleged haunting, travel to it, and make the necessary arrangements to investigate. A slight exception here is John Jervis. He investigated weird phenomena at Hinton Ampner, his sister’s haunted manor. He didn’t permanently reside there, but unlike most of the other ghost hunters I’ll discuss, he was related to the residents. If this compromised his objectivity in any way, it might have been counterbalanced by his co-investigators, John Bolton and James Luttrell.

  2. While some of the ghost hunters to be discussed have a clear bias for or against the possibility of spirits crossing between the dimensions, they all are open-minded enough to bother investigating a situation in which such a crossing is suspected. Belief in ghosts might best be understood as existing on a sliding scale. Those on the far ends are so convinced, so rigid, they probably wouldn’t bother confirming their convictions or risk having them challenged. The ghost hunters in this book might lean one way or the other—but they do so from somewhere in the middle of that scale.

  3. They apply the basic, time-tested strategies of paranormal investigation. This often means interrogating witnesses and/or closely examining the site by listening to how sound travels through walls, vents, or chimneys; looking for evidence of rodents or similar animals; checking the pipes, etc. Almost always, it involves those overnight stakeouts that I call nocturnal surveillance.

My hope is that each of the historical figures I present reflects more than a glimmer of how ghost hunting is understood and conducted now in the early 21st century. Indeed, tracking the evolution of ghost hunting across the centuries might stir feelings of connection between ghost hunters still living and their very long, very fascinating heritage.

Notes:

  1. Elizabeth Gunning, The Packet: A Novel, vol. 4 (Printed for J. Bell, 1794) p. 5. Regarding the Hammersmith case, see “Melancholy Accident,” True Briton, January 6, 1804, p. 4, and “Domestic Incidents,” Universal Magazine 1 (January 1804) p. 63. The play is D. Lawler’s The School for Daughters (Printed for the author by R. Juigné, 1808) p. 50. The books are John Snart’s Thesaurus of Horror: Or, The Charnel House Explored!!! (Sherwood, Neely, Jones, 1817) p. 166, and Henry Nugent Bell’s The Huntington Peerage (Printed for Baldwin, Cradock, and Joy, 1820) p. 251.

  2. George Cruikshank, A Discovery Concerning Ghosts; With a Rap at the “Spirit Rappers” (Frederick Arnold, 1863) p. 6. The actual dates of Pliny’s birth and death are circa 61 CE and circa 113 CE respectively.

  3. See Andrew Lang, Cock Lane and Common-Sense (Longmans, Green, and Co., 1894) p. 95, and R.C. Finucane, Ghosts: Appearances of the Dead & Cultural Transformation (Prometheus, 1996) pp. 194-204.

Guest Contributor Bio

Tim Prasil writes ghostly mysteries; anthologizes quirky, old fiction; and explores historical ghostlier. He also reads (aloud) Tales Told When the Widows Rattle on YouTube.  You can find out more about him at www.brombonesbooks.com.

The Bruja Professor, a witchy take on literature, the occult & pop culture, is the scholarly sister to Enchantment Learning & Living, an inspirational blog celebrating life’s simple pleasures, everyday mysticism, and delectable recipes that are guaranteed to stir the kitchen witch in you.

If you enjoyed what you just read and believe that stories are magic & true magic is in the everyday…or your next good read, subscribe to my newsletter below for regular doses of enchantment.

Want even more inspiration? Follow me on Instagram, Facebook, Pinterest, and Twitter. Here’s to a magical life!

The Origin of the Tarot with Jessica Mason

As witches and pagans, it’s almost a given that we have to spend a lot of time thinking about the past. After all we are engaging with practices and faiths that are thousands of years old, many with roots before recorded history. We’re piecing together ancient stories and arts, trying to fit them into our modern lives and so it feels almost like a given that some of the most common and well-known tools of our trade must come from a source shrouded in mystery and magic. That’s the default conception of the Tarot. The default assumption is that these cards are some sort of ancient mystery, handed down from high priests of Egypt, hidden from the church, and only recently revealed. Or it was invented by Romani fortune-tellers and should not be touched by outside hands.

These stories are compelling and captivating … but they’re wrong. The history of the Tarot isn’t quite as complicated or mysterious, though there are some unknown parts. This divination tool has a far more modern origin, at least compared to ancient Egypt. But the story of the tarot is fascinating nonetheless.

Tarot began as a card game, pure and simple and the story of tarot is the same as the history of playing cards in general. Playing cards themselves began to show up in Europe around the late 14th century. These were hand-painted cards, but they were made of paper and used a lot so not many survived the centuries. However, we know these cards had suits like modern tarot and playing cards. The real mystery is where did those come from?

We actually don’t really know but the most likely explanation and origin is Asia, specifically China where games played with cards and tiles like Mah Jong, were popular. Mah Jong itself had suits and special trump-type tiles that are suspiciously similar to Tarot, so it’s probably a distant ancestor of the cards we used today. The games likely moved along the silk road until they made it to Europe.

The oldest known Tarot deck is the Visconti-Sforza deck from around 1440. This Italian deck was used for the game which game tarot its name, Tarocchi. The major arcana, as we now know them, were inspired by allegorical figures used in festivals and carnivals, and so the symbolism of the journey of a soul through life, death, and resurrection, was already built in. The game was popular in Italy and eventually caught on in France as well. Eventually, decks like the famous Tarot of Marseilles became popular aby by the time that deck was popular, around 1750, Tarot as a divinatory tool was popular.

And that’s not surprising. Divination has always been part of human culture, from the most ancient of times, and humans will use anything to do it. But it won’t always be recorded. By the 18th century Tarot as a divination tool was popular enough that occultist Jean-Baptiste Alliette, or Etteilla, wrote a famous work analyzing the mystic meaning of the Tarot … and falsely connecting it to the ancient Egyptians. This isn’t surprising however given that a lot of secret societies at the time, including the Freemasons, were all about connecting their rites to Egypt since it was the most ancient culture that the majority of folks knew of. Alliette was also the first to name the major and minor arcana.

Occultism itself grew and developed into the 19th and early 20th century, perhaps most famously with the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, which had roots in Freemasonry and Rosicrucianism much like Alliette’s work. Therefore it’s not surprising that the modern Tarot we know best was developed by members of that organization. The deck which made Tarot famous globally is commonly referred to as the “Rider-Waite” but is more accurately called the Rider-Waite-Colman-Smith deck. That’s because while Rider was the publisher and golden dawn member Arthur Waite wrote the guide, it was the amazing Pamela Colman-Smith who created the cards we know so well today and it was she who first put allegorical images to all 78 cards. 

Tarot isn’t ancient Egyptian, but it does tap into an ancient practice, that is, divination itself and using it as a tool to speak to the divine, to the otherworld, or even simply to ourselves. The real history of the Tarot may not be as sexy as “ancient manuscript revealed to a select few” but that’s okay. A tool doesn’t have to be ancient to work and a system doesn’t need to be shrouded in mystery to be magical.

Guest Contributor Bio

Jessica Mason lives near Portland, Oregon with her wife, daughter, and corgi. She is a journalist and author of nonfiction, fiction, and fan fiction. She hosts the Reel Magic podcast and when she’s not writing or being a fangirl, she enjoys gardening, writing other things, music, and witchcraft.

The Bruja Professor, a witchy take on literature, the occult & pop culture, is the scholarly sister to Enchantment Learning & Living, an inspirational blog celebrating life’s simple pleasures, everyday mysticism, and delectable recipes that are guaranteed to stir the kitchen witch in you.

If you enjoyed what you just read and believe that stories are magic & true magic is in the everyday…or your next good read, subscribe to my newsletter below for regular doses of enchantment.

Want even more inspiration? Follow me on Instagram, Facebook, Pinterest, and Twitter. Here’s to a magical life!

Welcome to The Bruja Professor…

Welcome to The Bruja Professor…

A witchy take on literature, the occult & pop culture!

This is the corner of my website where I share articles, insights, and other resources to help fellow story lovers explore the world of literature and popular culture through an intersectional lens. I’ll be writing about the genres that most nourish me as a writer and bruja while hosting like-minded magical nerdy folk to share their expertise on the genres and lifestyles we love.  

So if you like spooky stuff, bodice rippers, witchy business, and occult detectives, look no further than The Bruja Professor for lively conversations about the stories that make our lives more magical. 

Guiding Philosophy

Here we believe that our shared love of stories, fandoms, and genres can be a numinous experience. This inclusive space celebrates the fundamental magic of stories—what we write, what we read, what we watch, what we talk about—and how they shape us as magical beings.  

And yes, to shamelessly quote the film Practical Magic, there’s a little witch in all of us. Stories help us tap into that numinous energy.  As any book lover can tell you, there’s something transformative, enchanting even, about a story’s ability to heal, revive, empower, terrify, and inspire.  

My witchy practice is also all about social justice, so you’ll see me and fellow contributors breaking down what I call the ordinary gothic side of the genres we love, you know, the casual racism, sexism, homophobia, ableism, xenophobia, etc. that we can normalize when we don’t explicitly and directly address those issues.

Sometimes, we are so used to seeing those terrible -isms in the media that we consume that we read right past them…terrifying! Hence, it’s ordinary gothic, the thing that is all the more shocking for how we normalize it. We’re invested in dragging these things into the light so they can’t feed on the shadows—it’s one way of breaking the cycles of systemic oppression. Just another day in the life of a bruja.

Also, you might be wondering who this ‘we’ is in The Bruja Professor.  That’s me and my familiar, Smoke.  He’s my editor.  Nothing gets posted on this website unless it’s familiar approved. 

The Magic of Dynamic Discussion 

The Bruja Professor is all about fun and engaging explorations and yes, problematization, of the genres we love.  It should be a joy to learn and discover new ways of looking at the world. And we should be able to happily unpack and dismantle systemic oppression by becoming more self-aware and informed consumers and creators. 

That’s why this space is devoted to dynamic, complex discussions about the stories that shape us, in good ways, in bad ways, in complex ways, with the fundamental knowledge that there’s no such thing as a perfect story, only stories that deeply affect us.  This blog embraces the magical intersection between social justice, intellectual curiosity, and the love of storytelling in all forms. 

So, to recap, here’s everything you need to know about The Bruja Professor:

What it is…

A magical virtual salon where we can joyfully explore the complicated and wonderful world of storytelling, from the delightful to the dreadful. Here the personal is political (trite but true), storytelling is political AND personal, as is our relationship to the stories we consume.  This space celebrates inclusive, intersectional explorations of literature, the occult, and popular culture. 

This is also a safe space for those of us with marginalized identities.  Anyone violating that will be hexed.

What it isn’t…

This isn’t a place to roast internet trolls (however much they deserve it) or blithely and uncritically wax poetic about stories and genres that, to put it mildly, GOTZ PROBLEMS.  Nor is it a place to share academic treaties (sorry, there’s other venues for that!) or snooze-worthy diatribes on [fill in the blank].  Don’t get me wrong—we want people to gush about their passions in an informed and thoughtful way, just don’t be so formal about it!

Lastly, I feel like I need to say this since we will be discussing witchy and occult stuff from time to time, but this is not a space where we will accidentally post ancient Latin spells (lifted from the internet, naturally) which could accidentally summon a demon or resurrect an ancient spirit bent on world domination.  Let’s leave that stuff for the B horror movies and campy occult detective shows.  Now those, we’ll talk about.  

As for those ancient spells, you might go looking for on the internet…just don’t.  It never ends well. 

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The Bruja Professor, a witchy take on literature, the occult & pop culture, is the scholarly sister to Enchantment Learning & Living, an inspirational blog celebrating life’s simple pleasures, everyday mysticism, and delectable recipes that are guaranteed to stir the kitchen witch in you.

If you enjoyed what you just read and believe that stories are magic & true magic is in the everyday…or your next good read, subscribe to my newsletter below for regular doses of enchantment.

Want even more inspiration? Follow me on Instagram, Facebook, Pinterest, and Twitter. Here’s to a magical life!