Category: Prison Myth

  • Electric Chair Soul-Trap

    The Electric Chair Soul-Trap was the belief that electrocution did not simply kill the condemned but altered the soul’s departure, leaving part or all of the executed person’s essence trapped within prison wires, switchboards, electrodes, or the execution chamber itself. The theory drew power from the overlap between two late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century cultural developments: the rise of Spiritualism and the rise of electrical technology. Because electricity was often imagined as an invisible force linking bodies, minds, and unseen worlds, the electric chair came to be viewed by some not only as a killing machine but as a device that interfered with the soul’s natural release. In prison folklore and occult retelling, execution rooms became charged spaces where the dead remained present because the current had caught them.