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OverviewExploring the Haunted Airwaves Before the ubiquity of streaming, British television was a landscape with room for strange experiments, folk-horror nightmares, and ""wyrd"" transmissions. Today, many of these programmes have vanished from official channels, leaving behind only ""ghost signals"" a shadowland of terrestrial TV hidden in plain sight across the unmediated and unmarketed corners of the internet. Ghost Signals maps this territory from 1968 - the foundational ""wyrd"" year of acid folk and iconic folk horror - to 1995, the dawn of the digital revolution. The book delves into a unique era where public funding met social experimentation, creating a ""broad diet"" of television that was often as challenging as it was chilling. This landscape invited viewers to encounter the seasonal hauntings of A Ghost Story for Christmas, the suburban occult of Scorpion Tales: Great Albert, and the layered mythologies of The Moon Stallion. It was a time that embraced the edgeland quiet horror of Unnatural Causes: Lost Property, the prescient virtual worlds of Play for Tomorrow: Shades, and the metatextual timeslip satire of ScreenPlay: The Black and Blue Lamp. From the paranormal pathways of Leap in the Dark: Jack Be Nimble to the non-horror folk horror of Play for Today: The Lonely Man's Lover, these broadcasts pushed the boundaries of the terrestrial signal. Released as part of the A Year In The Country project - which explores the intersection of folk horror, hauntology, and the ""eerie"" landscape - Ghost Signals is a journey through the fading frequencies of a spectral past: the hidden gems that continue to resonate within our collective cultural memory, flourishing quietly in the digital attic of the internet. Chapter List: 1. A Ghost Story for Christmas - Whistle and I'll Come to You, The Stalls of Barchester and The Icehouse: A Lineage of Seasonal Hauntings 2. Tales of Unease: Conjuring Half-Hour Worlds of Unsettling Tension and Intrigue 3. Play For Today - The Lonely Man's Lover and Stronger Than the Sun: From the Fields of Non-Horror Folk Horror to Seaside Secret State Cycle Subterfuge 4. Scorpion Tales - The Great Albert: Occult Summonings and Ambiguity in Suburbia 5. The Moon Stallion: A Teatime Layering of Legend and Mythology 6. Leap in the Dark - Jack Be Nimble: Pathways Through Paranormal Powers and Between the Roots of Magic and Glamour 7. The Bells of Astercote: Trapped Forever Guarding the Chalice 8. A Pattern of Roses: Timeslip Echoes and Cold War Controversies 9. Play for Tomorrow - Shades: Escaping from Real World Shadows into Prescient Virtual Worlds 10. Dramarama - Spooky: The Exorcism of Amy: Stepping Into a Fever Dream Nightmare 11. Screen Two - Unfair Exchanges and The Blue Boy: A Multi-Layered Shadowed Whirlwind of Creativity, Paranoia and Fringe Science, A Phantom's Revenge and Roads to Doom 12. Unnatural Causes - Lost Property: A Bubble Edgeland of Quiet Horror 13. ScreenPlay - The Black and Blue Lamp: Metatextual Satire and Preternatural Timeslip to Life on Mars and Back 14. The Plant: Unearthing a Leafy Suburban Invasion Appendix: A Definition of Hauntology, its Recurring Themes and Intertwining with Otherly Folk, Folk Horror and Explorations of a Rural and Urban Wyrd Cultural Landscape ""For any self-respecting hauntologist, A Year In The Country is a treasure trove of wyrd delights."" Sarah Gregory, Shindig! Full Product DetailsAuthor: Stephen PrincePublisher: Year in the Country Imprint: Year in the Country Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 0.80cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.200kg ISBN: 9781916940208ISBN 10: 191694020 Pages: 142 Publication Date: 04 March 2026 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsAuthor InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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