Subcultures and Social Trends: The Paranormal Investigators – Bring Out Your Dead

in #subculture8 years ago

Humans have always struggled with uncertainty, the unknown and the afterlife.

The stale, putrid air of an abandoned, historic building; the soft green glow of the EMF meter; the muffled creak of the floor boards; the tug on the back of the shirt and three burning scratches on your arm for which there is no explanation…

Welcome to the subculture of the Paranormal Investigator.

A Brief History of Paranormal Investigation

The very first historical reference of both a haunted house story a ghost hunt dates back to 100 AD, from Pliny the Younger, an ancient Roman magistrate. In a letter written to a fellow government official Lucius Licinius Sura, he explained a house existed in which the apparition of an old man, emaciated, with a beard and wearing heavy chains haunted any who purchased or rented the home. The haunting was constant and unyielding to the point the property was abandoned.

A philosopher named Athendorus took up residence and endured the haunting with the sole purpose of discovering the source of the unsettled apparition. One evening after many nights of continued haunts, he was finally able to follow the apparition outside the home to a place where it disappeared. He marked the spot, and in the morning, he ordered it to be dug up. The excavation produced the corpse of a man wrapped in chains and once a proper burial was performed, the apparition never returned.

The next major milestone in Paranormal Investigation occurs in 1681 when Joseph Glanvill, the chaplain of King Charles II of England, was charged with investigating the case of a ghostly drummer in Tedworth.

“John Mompesson of Tedworth (located in Wiltshire, England) brought a lawsuit against a local drummer whom he accused of collecting money under false pretences. The court found the drummer guilty, confiscated his drum, and gave it to Mompesson. Soon afterwards, Mompesson discovered that an angry, drumming spirit had invaded his house. The spirit drummed loud tunes on the bed of his children, moved objects around in the house, threw shoes, and wrestled with servants.”

Joseph Glanvill visited the household, promptly collected eyewitness accounts of the activities of the spirit, experienced and recorded unexplained noises himself and in his 1668 work titled, A Blow at Modern Sadducism, wrote about his conviction the spirit was, indeed, real.

In the mid 1700s, the groundwork for modern ghost hunting began with a strange marriage from the mix of science and religion during the time of the Enlightenment. Then in 1820, the Danish physicist and chemist Hans Christian Orsted discovered electric current created a magnetic field, and a cult rose around electromagnetism. The core principle was to imbue electricity with mystical powers and revere it as a divine universal principle, forever linking the electromagnetic with the paranormal.

The 1850’s gave rise to the movement of Spiritualism, spawned in the wake of poltergeist activity experienced by the family of Doctor Phelps at the Phelps Mansion in the New England town of Stratford, Connecticut. The offshoot of both this experience and the Spiritualism movement was the birth and mainstream acceptance of the séance party; dressing to the nines in a dark room, with only the soft glow of candles to provide a source of light and spiritual mediums speaking in tongues to the guests. Spiritualists believed a soul could be empirically quantified and the next milestone in Paranormal Investigation first appears at this point: spirit photography is born.

In the mid 1800s, The American Psychological Association suggested the application of scientific method to paranormal investigation, and in 1882, The Society for Psychical Research was formed by journalist, Edmund Rogers and physicist, William Barrett in West Kensington, London. This would be the very first organization of this kind in the world, with a stated purpose, “to approach these varied problems without prejudice or prepossession of any kind, and in the same spirit of exact and unimpassioned enquiry which has enabled science to solve so many problems, once not less obscure nor less hotly debated."

The contribution this organization made towards modern paranormal investigation was to approach the investigation from the standpoint of debunking and disproving rather than proving and reinforcing hypothetical solutions. The society was responsible for the exposure of fraudulent spiritual media, the disproval of the psychic powers of Helena Blavatsky and claimed her a fraud, the disproval of the famed spirit photographers Eoduard Isidore Buget and William H. Mumler and the publication of the infamous work Census of Hallucinations; where the organization sampled 17,000 individuals and discovered 1,684 persons admitted to having experienced a hallucination of an apparition.

In the current era, paranormal investigation has achieved celebrity status, complete with an array of technology that would make Bill Murray’s Ghostbusters appear very retro. Belief in the paranormal is running at an all time high, and with shows such as Ghost Adventures still going strong in its tenth season, it’s hard to believe the subculture will fade anytime soon.

What Exactly is a Paranormal Investigator?

“Paranormal Obsession balances the world of the unseen with biting academic inquiry.”

According to a survey conducted by the Associated Press in 2008, approximately 34 percent of Americans believe in the existence of ghosts.

Perhaps it’s strange apparitions in the mirror or a haunt bellying up to the bar in your local haunted tavern, or the feeling of coldness, chills or being touched. Most of the spirits you encounter are confused and have no idea they are dead.

Cue the Paranormal Investigator.

”Typically, a ghost hunting team will attempt to collect evidence that they see as supportive of paranormal activity. Ghost hunters often use a variety of electronic devices: the EMF meter; digital thermometer; handheld and static digital video cameras, such as thermographic (or infrared) and night vision; digital audio recorder; and computer.

Traditional techniques such as conducting interviews and researching the history of a site are also employed. Some ghost hunters refer to themselves as a paranormal investigator.”

Based upon the growing marketplace for paranormal investigation reality shows, it would appear he confused ghost phenomena are more prevalent and growing with time.

The media is saturated with all things paranormal. A cross section of written media:

On television, the paranormal saturation continues, some of the top ranked Paranormal Reality Television shows are:

Capitalism and the Paranormal Investigator Subculture

Cashing in on the paranormal investigation subculture is something that appears to be both easy and second nature.

In the modern Paranormal Investigaton subculture, one needs a vast array of technology (http://www.ghosthunting101.com/) simply to get in on the ground floor. Fear not, there are stores devoted to this growing niche industry to get your Ghostbusting essentials:

State of the art equipment is no good without a place to investigate.

Zak Bagans, the star of Ghost Adventures, recently purchased the historic Wengert House (a designated historic landmark) in Las Vegas, Nevada, with the intent of converting the first floor into a public museum to house his collection of cursed artifacts. He refers to the house as a, “gateway to hell” and features artifacts such as: Doctor Kevorkian’s death mobile, the Dibbuk box and The Peggy Doll.

It’s a surefire destination for the paranormal enthusiast and the morbidly curious.

Undeniably, the market for the Paranormal Subculture is deep and diverse. There appears to be no end to the fascination humans as a whole have in the supernatural and the paranormal. Perhaps it has something to do with each of us connecting to the campfire ghost story in the digital age, or perhaps it has something to do with each of us trying to prove or disprove our own theories about the unknown.

References

http://newcastleghosttours.blogspot.com/2011/12/ghost-hunting-is-nothing-new.html

Angels & Ghosts. “The History of Ghosts: Ghost Sightings.” Np. Nd. http://www.angelsghosts.com/history-of-ghosts-ghost-sightings

Aldridge, Alfred Owen. “Franklin and the Ghostly Drummer of Tedworth,” William and Mary Quarterly, Third Series, Volume 7, Issue 4 (Oct., 1950), 559-567. http://hoaxes.org/Hoaxipedia/Ghostly_Drummer_of_Tedworth

Young, John. “The History of Ghost Hunting.” HubPages. June 25, 2015. http://hubpages.com/religion-philosophy/The-History-of-Ghost-Hunting

Marlon. “Ghost Hunting Through Time.” Angels & Ghosts. N.d. http://www.angelsghosts.com/ghost-hunting-through-time

Wikipedia. “Society for Psychical Research.” N.p. August 19, 2016. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Society_for_Psychical_Research

Wikipedia.”Ghost Hunting.” N.p. September 14, 2016. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ghost_hunting

Taylor, Troy. “Strange Happenings of the Phelps Mansion.” The Stratford Poltergeist. N.d. http://www.prairieghosts.com/stratford.html

Barton, Steve. “Zak Bagans Talks Deadly Posessions, His Museum, and the Dangers of Haunted Objects.” Dread Central. April 8, 2016. http://www.dreadcentral.com/news/160505/zak-bagans-talks-deadly-possessions-museum-dangers-haunted-objects/

Paranormalhuntress. “Wengert House Becomes Zak Bagans’ Museum.” N.p. June 2016. https://paranormalhuntress.wordpress.com/2016/06/11/wengert-house-becomes-zak-bagans-museum/

Doubtful News. “New Ghost Hunting Store Aims to Serve Weekend Hobbyists.” N.p. September 21, 2013. http://doubtfulnews.com/2013/09/new-ghost-hunting-store-aims-to-serve-weekend-hobbyists/

Ganahl, Jane. “Ghost Hunters/First of Two Parts: Despite the Naysayers, Cliché Rituals Like Seances and Dowsing Rods, a Cadre of Believers in Haunted Mendocino Hotel Gather for a Conference and Trapped Spirits.” SFGate. May 8, 2006. http://www.sfgate.com/entertainment/article/GHOST-HUNTERS-First-of-two-parts-Despite-the-2497959.php

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