

Sladja Blažan, "Ghosts and Their Hosts: The Colonization of the Invisible World in Early America" (University of Virginia Press, 2025)
4 snips Jun 8, 2025
In this conversation, Sladja Blažan, a Berlin-based professor and author, unpacks the eerie influence of ghost stories in early America. She reveals how these tales shaped political ideologies and racial anxieties while justifying colonialism. Blažan critiques traditional views that see ghosts as symbols of justice, instead arguing they upheld existing hierarchies. The discussion connects cultural exchanges between Europe and America, exploring the role of ghosts in constructing identities and the haunting legacies that still resonate today.
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Beloved's Ghost Conveys Trauma
- Toni Morrison's "Beloved" uses the ghost of a child killed by her enslaved mother to express historical pain.
- Ghosts convey invisible, inexpressible weight of personal and historical trauma.
Ghost Stories Justify Colonization
- Early US ghost stories often replaced indigenous spirits with European settler ghosts.
- These stories framed land appropriation and racial hierarchies while excusing colonial guilt.
Puritan Ghosts Enforce Colonial Control
- Puritan ghost stories linked racialized bodies to satanic presence to enforce colonial control.
- Ghosts materialize only through others’ bodies, reinforcing racial and gendered violence.