This article examines Peter Ackroyd’s The English Ghost (2010) as a significant cultural archive gathering ghost stories that emerged over a broad time span, from the Anglo-Saxon period to the present day. Ackroyd compiles this collection by synthesizing accounts from diverse origins, ranging from newspapers, memoirs, and letters to ghost story collections and folk histories. Ackroyd’s collection serves as a rich repository of ghostlore, often treated as a folkloric discipline dedicated to the study of spectral phenomena. By presenting various manifestations and haunted locales across different eras, the collection reveals the underlying cultural facets and the evolving heritage of the English supernatural tradition. The article draws on a methodology of close reading and folklore studies, specifically the theories of William Bascom and Richard Bauman, to examine how ghost narratives function in the construction of national identity and collective memory. Moving beyond their value as entertainment, the article analyzes how the narratives in Ackroyd’s collection function as mirrors of English culture and heritage. This study specifically explores three recurring themes in the narratives: the persistent intrusion of the past into the present, the dichotomy between rational thought and supernatural occurrences, and collective fears regarding mortality and the afterlife. Ultimately, the article contends that this collection of ghost stories provides a comprehensive understanding of how a nation’s enduring fascination with the spectral embodies its cultural identity and reinforces its connection to an ancestral past.
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