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October 23, 2012

Haunted Folklore (Part Four): Phantom Fatale, By Kristina Wojtaszek


Editor's note: Here' the fourth of Kristina Wojtaszek's intriguing and informative series on folklore and ghosts and other spooky types. Kristina's short story, "Cinder" is featured in Specter Spectacular: 13 Ghostly Tales. For a look at "Cinder," click here.

The fifth and final installment of this series is next week, so don't miss the final spooky folklore update.

Mysterious, seductive, suppressed and sometimes vengeful, the presence of women abound in legend. Often portrayed as specters untamed by man or death, the hidden powers of the feminine spirit, and the ways of Mother Earth herself, are often explored in folklore. Perhaps the most powerful expression of femininity is that of motherly love, so it's no surprise that this nurturing continues beyond the grave in tales of old. From the Brothers Grimm come several such stories, including mothers who return to nurse or provide for their children, looking out for those whose stepparents deal a cruel hand. “The Brother and Sister,” “Cinderella,” and “The Goose Girl”    are a few. Conversely, a living mother might grieve so relentlessly for her deceased child that the child's spirit returns to comfort her, and set him free, as is seen in “The Little Shroud.” The Ubume of Japan is the ghost of a woman holding a baby after death in childbirth. If the child was never removed from her body and placed in her arms, she comes back to haunt by asking those she encounters to hold her child to give her a rest. Occasionally, this ends in doom for those who dare it. In stark contrast to such devotion, the mother in some versions of “La Llorona” purposefully drowns her children in order to gain a new husband. When this doesn't win the man over, she drowns herself, but is then forced to spend eternity as a specter in white weeping and searching for her children in the river.

Dawn Visitation, by Harold Hitchcock
Women in white are a common motif in folklore, even persisting in legends today. In European countries, the women in white may appear near caves or guarding bridges, where they require men to dance with them or kneel before them in order to pass. For this reason, some folklorists believe them to have come from the domestic guardian goddesses called Matres (meaning mothers). Others believe the white women from Germanic folklore to be descended from Hulda who lives in the bottom of a well, and keeps the souls of infants who die. Also known as Dame Holle, she is occasionally seen as the leader of the Wild Hunt or the Spectral Army, whose phantom soldiers cross the European skies.

Another goddess associated with both war and death is the Norse Freyja, who is said to receive half the souls of those slain in battle. The female spirits who choose who live and who die in battle are called the valkyries, specters who might be seen with ravens or horses to forewarn death. The Morrigan, the phantom queen of Ireland, may appear as a crow and her sighting is a sign of death to come. Another group of death bringers are the Kumakatok who knock on doors in the dead of night in the Philippines. There are three, and beneath their hoods, two appear as elderly while one is a strikingly young woman. There is also a skeletal female version of the Grim Reaper in Poland called Śmierć who escorts the dead. Norway's personification of Death is Pesta, an old hag named after the Black Plague. If her apparition appears with a rake in hand, some of the townsfolk will survive the sickness; but be it a broom instead and all are doomed. 

There are countless female deities to spirit away the dead, but most are considered benevolent escorts. The more harrowing spectral women are the seductresses and those who seek vengeance. The Onryō of Japan are usually the returned spirits of women who cause mischief by cursing kimonos, tormenting neglectful husbands, and even beheading the wives that replace them. The Rusalki of Russia are often said to be the spirits of women who drowned themselves or were murdered. Some were young girls who sought to end their lives after an unwanted pregnancy was discovered. They often dance or sing, luring men to follow them into the water, to their death. Many female specters are succubi, seductresses who drain the life from men. Examples include the Kitsune (fox spirits of Japan); the legend of Otsuyu, the phantom woman whose lover is found in the death clutch of a skeleton; and Lauretta Baldusi of “The Ghostly Concert,” who removes her betrothed's femur to form into a guitar.

First called “Conte de fees” in French, fairy tales may have even been named after the feminine spirit, as taboo women were often considered to be fairies. Even the three Fates who controlled not only men, but gods, by the simple domestic task of spinning, measuring, and cutting the yarns of our lives, are just little old ladies.

Kristina Wojtaszek grew up as a woodland sprite and mermaid, playing around the shores of Lake Michigan. At any given time she could be found with live snakes tangled in her hair and worn out shoes filled with sand. She earned a bachelor’s degree in Wildlife Management as an excuse to spend her days lost in the woods with a book in hand. She currently resides in the high desert country of Wyoming with her husband and two small children. She is fascinated by fairy tales and fantasy and her favorite haunts are libraries and cemeteries. Follow her @KristinaWojtasz  or on her blog, Twice Upon a Time.

6 comments:

Teresa Robeson said...

Perfect post for the Halloween season! :) I can't help but think that the Ubume tales that end in doom for the helpful passerby teaches people not to assist someone in need.

And, yikes! Drowning oneself to get a new husband??

I've never heard of a female Grim Reaper before; will have to look into that.

A.L. Loveday said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
A.L. Loveday said...

This is a really interesting post, thank you Kristina!
You have highlighted so many varying roles of women: we often discuss the role of women as portrayed in literature on my university course, and I think if folk tales were considered we'd see a much broader perception of what women are/do.

Anonymous said...

Haunted Folklore (Part Four): Phantom Fatale, By Kristina Wojtaszek
With those thoughts that we stay here on earth and wonder around looking for a purpose is not the way to think. The way we end is in either heaven or hell one or the other. There may be a place where the spirit may go until they make peace with their death, but to look for her children in the river like you can’t see the other side doesn’t make sense. When you die and move on to the other side you can watch over the love ones you have alive. To say that someone has the right to choose who dies in life or even in war is unthinkable. There is only one person that can determine who dies and that is the person themselves. Believing that some woman god spirit can tell you that you will die because they so is stupid. Now thinking that our lives are like string and can be cut by one of the three women is crazy. That is like in Hercules when three women called sister faiths had the right to cut a life if they wanted to isn’t right. No one is in charge but yourself.
Christina S

Anonymous said...

After talking about the art of fairy tales in class I wanted to take another stab at interpreting this photograph. The colors in this photo are very cool with the blues and purples and nighttime setting is only enhanced by this. In class we discussed how many girls can have an androgynous appearance and how that may be the case in this photo. I however believe the woman in this picture is displayed not as androgynous but as a young and innocent girl and perhaps a girl that has not yet reached her maturity. There are also many religious overtones in this picture as the girl is praying an aura of white is in the distance at the center of painting that brings a sense of peace to the picture. The last interesting part that stands out to me is the doves forming the shape of a heart in the background. I thought this was a neat touch as they aided Cinderella so much in her story of finding love in the arms of the prince.

Jake Crawford

Bradley Nies said...

Very cool! I've always thought the old woman in "The Robber Bridegroom" could have been a ghost, as she seems to fanish after getting the young woman out of the murderers' house.

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