Ghostwriting and Spectrality in Robert Harris’s The Ghost

  • Robert Lance SNYDER University of West Georgia, USA

Abstract

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10264510

A critique of Tony Blair’s collaboration with George W. Bush in the War on Terror, Robert
Harris’s The Ghost (2007) goes beyond its topical subject by exploring the connections between
ghostwriting and spectrality. The unnamed protagonist of Harris’s novel is a professional
ghostwriter who, after being commissioned to revamp former Prime Minister Adam Lang’s
memoirs, becomes enmeshed in various forms of spectrality. While isolated with his hosts in a
fortress-like compound on Martha’s Vineyard during the island’s bleak off-season, the
ghostwriter experiences the Uncanny firsthand. In the end he compiles a 160,000-word book,
not realizing that with the project’s completion he is signing his own death warrant by writing
a work about the pursuit of truth. The novel’s coda differs from that of Roman Polanski’s 2010
film adaptation, but Harris’s narrative captures the universality of literary Gothicism.

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Veröffentlicht
2025-05-07
Zitationsvorschlag
SNYDER, R. L. (2025). Ghostwriting and Spectrality in Robert Harris’s The Ghost. Cultural Intertexts, (13), 148-158. Abgerufen von https://www.gup.ugal.ro/ugaljournals/index.php/cultural-intertexts/article/view/8392
Rubrik
PART II On Gender and (Re)writing Patterns

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