This page collects together links to work related to folk horror.
“The Folk of Folk Horror” in Louis Bayman and Kevin Donnelly, eds. Folk Horror: Return of the British Repressed. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2022(?).
“The Folk of Folk Horror”, Contemporary Folk Horror in Film and Media, Leeds Beckett University (online), UK, 29-30 January 2022. – Read here.
“Ghosts and Television”, Scott Brewster and Luke Thurston (eds) A Companion to the Ghost Story. London: Routledge, 2017, pp.378-387
“Reading Folk Horror Through Nostalgia”, Genre / Nostalgia, University of Hertfordshire (online), 5 January 2021 – Read here.
“Rural Returns: Journeys to the Past and Pagan in Folk Horror”, Gothic Journeys: Paths, Crossings and Intersections, Gothic Association of New Zealand and Australia Conference, Surfer’s Paradise, Australia, 22-23 January 2019 – Read here.
“Hybrid Time in The Living and the Dead”, Gothic Hybridities: Interdisciplinary, Multimodal and Transhistorical Approaches: International Gothic Association Conference 2018, Manchester, UK, 31 July – 3 August 2018 – Read here. Note that this is a different version of the paper to the one delivered at After Fantastika listed below.
“Hybrid Time in The Living and the Dead”, After Fantastika, Lancaster University, UK, 6-7 July 2018 – Read here.
“The Sublime Horror of the English Countryside”, Gothic Nature: New Directions in Ecohorror and the Ecogothic, Trinity College Dublin, Ireland, 17-18 November 2017 – Read here.
“Time and Identity in Folk Horror”, A Fiend in the Furrows: Perspectives on Folk Horror in Literature, Film and Music, Queen’s University, Belfast, UK, 19-21 September, 2014 – Keynote presentation – Read here.
“Season, Landscape and Identity in the Ghost Story for Christmas”, A Dossier on Christmas Television, Journal of Popular Television, 6:1, 2018, pp.105-118