Scholarship and Approaches 115
Worth, or Mary Lou, among other possibilities. When a child summons the
ghost of this unfortunate girl, the ghost
becomes an aggressive attacker, inflicting
scratches on the face of the young person who dares to summon her. Some chil-
dren say that Mary Worth or Whales is a witch who died in Salem; others say that
she died at the hands of a jealous lover or that she can foretell the future (9, 30).
Since Langlois’s identification of this fascinating set of interrelated legends and
rituals, other scholars have studied their meaning. Bengt af Klintberg’s intriguing
essay “ ‘Black Madame, Come Out!’ ” (1988) quotes a 10-year-old Swedish girl’s
description of Black Madame
(Svarta Madame),
who
appears in a bathroom mir-
ror after someone says “I don’t believe in you, Black Madame” 12 times: “she has
green hair and red teeth and luminous yellow eyes; she herself is black” (155).
Black Madame is not the only name for spirits of this kind in Sweden; alternate
names are Bloody Black Madame, White Madame, Dirty Madame, and Creepy
Madame. Swedish children began summoning spirits
known by such English
names as Mary and Black Molly in bathroom mirrors in the 1970s, but the term
Svarta Madame
became dominant. Results of Black Madame’s appearance vary,
but she is commonly associated with good luck, bad luck, and, in the worst-case
scenario, sudden death. Af Klintberg concludes that this ritual originated in Eu-
ropean fortune-telling games such as mirror gazing in previous centuries. Like
television screens, mirrors provide “windows into the unknown” (162–64). In
Sweden, children tend to downplay Black Madame’s seriousness: “Swedish child
culture (and adult culture) is probably generally more
dismissive of spirits than
the American” (166).
Psychoanalytic analysis gives the summoning of ghosts in mirrors another di-
mension of meaning. In his essay “Bloody Mary in the Mirror,” Alan Dundes
suggests that “Bloody Mary” rituals reflect girls’ anxiety as they approach puberty.
According to Dundes, “the Bloody Mary ritual is a prepubescent fantasy about
the imminent onset of menses.” Central to his argument is the Freudian premise
that blood flowing from the head represents “upwards displacement” of blood
from the urinogenital area (87). Dundes presents 10
texts from female narrators
and considers other texts from the Knapps’ collection of “Scaries” in
One Potato,
Two Potato
(242), as well as Simon J. Bronner’s sample of “Mary Worth Rituals”
in
American Children’s Folklore
(168–69).
Although Dundes finds the “Bloody Mary” ritual to be closely connected to
preadolescent girls, other scholars’ analyses have found the ritual to be significant
for both boys and girls. In
Legend and Belief
(2001), Linda Dégh presents a long,
detailed “Mary Worth” text collected by Sue Samuelson from an 18-year-old
boy (243– 44). This text and others support Dégh’s contention that “the key in
this legend is believing and trusting” (244). My own essay “Ghosts in Mirrors”
(2005) views this legend/ritual complex through a somewhat different lens, sug-
gesting that the ritual primarily offers an opportunity for “daring and testing”
116 Children’s
Folklore
(187) by both preadolescents and college students. While preadolescence and
the college
years differ in many ways, both include fear tests that facilitate greater
independence and a more complex sense of self.
Few folklorists have studied children’s folklore of the supernatural outside of
Western culture. Margaret Brady’s
“Some Kind of Power”: Navajo Children’s Skin-
walker Narratives
(1984) offers important insight into Navajo children’s percep-
tions of the supernatural. Skinwalkers—witches that wear animal skins—often
appear as characters in Navajo children’s legends and personal experience stories.
At slumber parties and campouts on the reservation, children tell skinwalker
stories along with such traditional Anglo-American ghost stories as “The Golden
Arm” (100–101). Telling skinwalker stories
maintains social boundaries, both by
affirming that the teller is not a witch and by suggesting the need for a ceremony
to counteract the effects of witchcraft (50).
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