live show tonight!
The Phenomena Podcast with Augusta Chapman is BACK and spookier than ever! Come celebrate Halloween with an action packed Twilight-themed live show. Costumes encouraged.
last chance to RSVP here!
Summer Episode Schedule
Hello beautiful & treasured spirit children!
This summer, Gus & I are taking a business trip to the Feywild, and being that time progresses differently there, we will be pausing our normal episode release schedule for a short while. Fear not! We will return for Spooky Season in the fall.
Posting schedule for summer 2021:
July 9 — Episode 19, Necromancy III
July 23 — Episode 20, “season 1” finale & a special thank you <3
August 6 & 20 — no episodes while plane-shifting
September 3 — Episode 21: “season 2” begins, regular posting schedule resumes
Keep your eyes & ears peeled for Episode 25 on 10/29/2021, which will be our one-year anniversary special! Thank you all so much for your support, listens, shares, clicks, kind messages, and donations. It truly means so much to us, and we are every day floored by how lucky we are to be surrounded by such a thoughtful, funny, and sweet community.
All the love in this world and the next,
Eva
Show Notes, Episode 19
Works Cited
Desmangles, Leslie G. 1979. “The Vodun Way of Death: Cultural Symbiosis of Roman Catholicism and Vodun in Haiti.” The Journal of Religious Thought 36 (1): 5-20.
Diouf, Sylvianne A. 2015. Servants of Allah: African Muslims Enslaved in the Americas. New York: New York University Press.
Fumagalli, Maria C. 2012. “Servants Turned Masters: Carlos Esteban Deive's Viento Negro, Bosque del Caimán, and the future of Hispaniola.” Journal of Haitian Studies 18 (2): 100-118.
Paton, Diana. 2012. “Witchcraft, Poison, Law, and Atlantic Slavery.” The William and Mary Quarterly 69 (2): 235-264.
Show notes for The Phenomena Podcast (do their best to) follow the Chicago Manual of Style (17th ed.), per the American Anthropological Association’s guidelines.
Show Notes, Episode 18
Works Cited
Bailey, Michael D. 2001. “From Sorcery to Witchcraft: Clerical Conceptions of Magic in the Later Middle Ages.” Speculum 76 (4): 960-990.
Giralt, Sebastià. 2017. “Medieval Necromancy, the Art of Controlling Demons.” Sciencia.cat website. Accessed June 22, 2021. https://www.sciencia.cat/temes/medieval-necromancy-art-controlling-demons
Herzig, Tamar. 2011. “The Demons and the Friars: Illicit Magic and Mendicant Rivalry in Renaissance Bologna.” Renaissance Quarterly 64 (4): 1025-1058.
Kieckhefer, Richard. 1990. Magic in the Middle Ages. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Klaassen, Frank. 2019. “Necromancy.” In The Routledge History of Medieval Magic, edited by Sophie Page and Catherine Rider, 201-211. London: Routledge.
University of Paris Faculty. 1398. 2015. “The University of Paris: A Condemnation of Magic, 1398.” In The Witchcraft Sourcebook, edited by Brian P. Levack, 49-53. New York: Routledge.
Truitt, E. R. 2012. “Celestial Divination and Arabic Science in Twelfth-Century England: The History of Gerbert of Aurillac's Talking Head.” Journal of the History of Ideas 73 (2): 201-222.
Show notes for The Phenomena Podcast (do their best to) follow the Chicago Manual of Style (17th ed.), per the American Anthropological Association’s guidelines.
Show Notes, Episode 17
Works Cited
Antoine, On’okoko Tolela. “Biblical Analysis of Causes and Effects of Necromancy Practices in Contemporary Africa.” MA diss. Africa Nazarene University, 2008.
Arnold, Bill T. 2004. “Necromancy and Cleromancy in 1 and 2 Samuel.” The Catholic Biblical Quarterly 66 (2): 199-213.
Gardner, Chelsea A. M. 2021. “The “Oracle of the Dead” at Ancient Tainaron: Reconsidering the
Literary and Archaeological Evidence.” Hesperia: The Journal of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens 90 (2): 339-358.
Ogden, Daniel. 2002. Greek and Roman Necromancy. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
Show notes for The Phenomena Podcast (do their best to) follow the Chicago Manual of Style (17th ed.), per the American Anthropological Association’s guidelines.
Show Notes, Episode 15
Hi all! Here’s our very first set of on-time show notes. If you notice anything awry, don’t hesitate to get in touch (:
Works Cited
Harmon, Lauren Alexandra. “The Spirit of the Law: The Haunting of U.S. Federal Indian Law in the Contemporary Western.” PhD diss. Cornell University, 2017.
Irwin, Lee. 1997. “Freedom, Law, and Prophecy: A Brief History of Native American Religious Resistance.” American Indian Quarterly 21 (1): 35-55.
Mallon, Sean. 2018. “Opinion: Why We Should Beware of the Word ‘Traditional’.” Te Papa's Blog website, May 16. Accessed May 3, 2021. https://blog.tepapa.govt.nz/2016/12/20/opinion-why-we-should-beware-of-the-word-traditional/
McNally, Michael D. Defend the Sacred: Native American Religious Freedom beyond the First Amendment. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2020.
Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act, 25 U.S.C. §§ 3001 et seq. (1990).
Price, H. M. 1991. Disputing the Dead: U.S. Law on Aboriginal Remains and Grave Goods. Columbia, MO: University of Missouri Press.
Show notes for The Phenomena Podcast (do their best to) follow the Chicago Manual of Style (17th ed.), per the American Anthropological Association’s guidelines. The Chicago Manual of Style defers to the The Bluebook: A Uniform System of Citation for legal citations.
Recommendations
Thank you for listening!
A Note on Show Notes
Hello all! Thank you so much for visiting our website!
We are currently working to aggregate and format show notes for our previous episodes. Show notes are very important in podcasting, and we do want to have them, we just have not had a place for them until launching this website. This podcast does not exactly have a deep bench, so it is a slow process.
Going forward, our goal is to post the correct show notes on the blog as new episodes are released, and on alternating weeks we will post retroactive show notes for previous episodes. So, the posts will be out of order from the episodes, but by the end of the year we will have finished all of them. In theory.
Show notes for The Phenomena Podcast (do their best to) follow the Chicago Manual of Style (17th ed.), per the American Anthropological Association’s guidelines. The Chicago Manual of Style defers to the The Bluebook: A Uniform System of Citation for legal citations.
Thank you for listening! <3
Eva
Show Notes, Episode 14
Works Cited
Cullins, Ashley. “Warner Bros. Settles $900M Lawsuit Over ‘The Conjuring’.” Hollywood Reporter (Los Angeles, CA), Dec. 13, 2017.
Feikert-Ahalt, Clare. 2012. “Revealing the Presence of Ghosts.” Library of Congress website, Oct. 31. Accessed April 26, 2021. https://blogs.loc.gov/law/2012/10/revealing-the-presence-of-ghosts/
Fortune tellers licensing, M.G.L. c.140, § 185I.
Gardner, Eriq. “Judge Allows $900 Million ‘Conjuring’ Lawsuit Against Warner Bros.” Hollywood Reporter (Los Angeles, CA), Aug. 28, 2017.
Glionna, John M.. “Fortuneteller License Law Called Biased.” Los Angeles Times (Los Angeles, CA), Jul. 21, 2003.
NEW ORLEANS, L.A., CODE OF ORDINANCES § 54-312 (1956).
N.Y. PEN. LAW § 165.35.
Obtaining property by trick, M.G.L. c.266 § 75.
Shortt, Michael. 2017. “A Spirited Look at the Common Law of Ghosts.” Fasken website, Oct. 31. Accessed April 26, 2021. https://www.fasken.com/en/commonlawofghosts-EN/
Stambovsky v. Ackley, 169 AD 2d 254 (NY 1991).
Show notes for The Phenomena Podcast (do their best to) follow the Chicago Manual of Style (17th ed.), per the American Anthropological Association’s guidelines. The Chicago Manual of Style defers to the The Bluebook: A Uniform System of Citation for legal citations.