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COOKEVILLE, Tenn. (Sept. 1, 2006) – Think ghost stories are only
for being told around a crackling campfire at night? Think again.
An assistant professor of history at Tennessee Tech University has brought
them into the classroom, and Paula Hinton’s ghosts, myths and legends
in American history course is scaring up lots of interest among history
majors and non-history majors alike.
“This is a fun course because it delves into a part of America’s
past that’s largely ignored by most historians,” Hinton said.
The purpose of the class is not just to share favorite campfire ghost
stories, however. It examines how those “things that go bump in
the night” can reveal broader patterns about the past.
“By studying the ghost stories, myths and legends that were popular
at a given time, you can actually learn quite a bit about a society’s
gender, race and class issues and about the cultural impact of national
and world events,” Hinton said.
The 19th century rise of spiritualism, for instance, reveals an important
gender issue.
“This was long before the Women’s Rights movement. Women
still couldn’t vote. They didn’t have careers outside the
home — but the greatest percentage of spiritualist mediums were
women,” she said. “By supposedly being able to communicate
with their clients’ dead relatives, they were indirectly wielding
a sort of power.”
For another example, UFO sightings and alleged alien abductions didn’t
gain widespread popularity until the Cold War — which reveals how
deeply Americans feared the military-industrial complex created during
that period of history.
“With this class, the history just sneaks in without the students
even knowing it,” Hinton said. “Even students who tell me
they don’t typically like history seem to come to this class excited
and eager to learn.”
Some of them also come ready to share personal stories of their own possible
encounters with the supernatural.
“It’s often not just students who catch me after class to
tell me things like that,” Hinton said. “I’ve found
that mentioning this class can be a good conversation starter with almost
anyone — but you can’t always predict what a person’s
reaction is going to be.”
When she first told her family about the course, for instance, her aunt
revealed her own close encounter with a possible ghost.
“When my uncle was in the Army, his family lived for a time in
an historic home at Fort Monroe, and their small daughter had an imaginary
friend who was an adult woman,” Hinton said.
One day, the child — in a state near panic — told her mother
that she’d found her friend hanging in a closet in the house. The
episode inspired Hinton’s aunt to research the history of the house,
and she discovered that a former female resident had indeed hanged herself
in one of its closets.
Hinton, a native of Virginia Beach, said the local legend of Grace Sherwood
— popularly known as the Witch of Pungo — influenced her own
interest in such topics.
Sherwood is Virginia’s only convicted witch, but her name was officially
cleared this year on July 10 — the 300th anniversary of the court
ruling against her.
As for topics covered in Hinton’s course, she said she usually
begins with a study of the varied cultural traditions that have led to
our current Halloween celebrations — such as carving jack-o-lanterns,
trick-or-treating, bobbing for apples and wearing costumes.
It also includes a survey of the Salem witch trials, New England vampire
lore, the rise and popularity of spiritualism and the cultural history
of horror in Hollywood films.
And it doesn’t neglect the poltergeist that could be considered
Tennessee’s state ghost — the Bell Witch.
The legend of the Bell Witch, which haunted the family of John Bell in
Robertson County’s Adams community from 1817 to 1821, may be one
of the only accounts to credit a supernatural force for a person’s
death. The “witch” allegedly poisoned Bell as he slept.
While that detail of the legend might call people today to question the
existence of a supernatural force in committing that crime, Hinton points
out that the purpose of her course is not to determine whether or not
ghosts exist.
“By its very nature, history is an exercise of the imagination,”
she said. “We don’t know — nor will we ever know —
exactly what happened in the past.
“Ghosts, myths and legends are just the contexts I use to encourage
students in this course to understand — and then to challenge —
the assumptions and methodologies historians use to study the past,”
Hinton continued.
“It’s a topic that makes them think about the ways history
has been used to justify the present and to legitimize social and political
relationships,” she said.
--Tracey LeFevre
This information posted 13 October 2006
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