Events and CFPs: Fairytale ballads, water horses, Romanticism, Victorian, Gothic others, science, Ann Radcliffe

NB: The BARS deadline is approaching–29 September!!

Edit: I forgot to include the Haunted Landscape event at Conwy Hall–my apologies.

The Singing Bones: Ballads for the Witching Season

The Carterhaugh School, four weeks from 4 November, 2025; on line.

A fascinating course on the darker folkloric ballads. This is a topic very close to OGOM’s research on dark faerie literature, with its conjunction of the Gothic, the folkloric and the liteary!

Step into the half-lit world of traditional ballads where fairies steal lovers, ghosts demand revenge, devils make dark bargains, and murderers meet their fates beneath the waning moon. For centuries, these sung stories have carried humanity’s deepest fears and desires – grief, passion, enchantment, and awe – from one generation to the next, one firelit gathering at a time. In this course, we’ll listen, read, and feel our way through the shadowed beauty of the folkloric ballad tradition and discover how the Romantics reimagined these eerie tales for a new age.

The Legend, Lore and Spirit of the Water Horse

The Folklore Society, Tuesday, 4 November 2025; 7–8:30 pm GMT. On line

Another excursion into dark folklore after our own hearts, and sharing themes with our Sea Changes research.

Stephen Miller brings together the traditions of the water horse over the centuries in myths, folklore, literature and the visual arts

Some fabulous conferences in 2026; CFPs to follow:

CFP: Gothic Selves/Artificial Others: 18th Biennial Conference of the International Gothic Association

IGA, University of Hull, UK, 28–31 July, 2026

Deadline: 30 January 2026

Once speculative, artificial intelligence now haunts contemporary society, with public discourse around its application and scope ranging from the utopian to the apocalyptic. The Gothic’s fascination with doubles, simulacra, uncanny agency, and other forms of otherness offers rich tools for examining the anxieties and crucial ethical dilemmas provoked by AI. The Gothic has long been preoccupied with the unstable boundaries between the natural and the artificial, as well as between individual subjectivity and the sublime terror of being subsumed into larger networks of terrible knowledge. [. . .] ‘Gothic Selves/Artificial Others’ invites scholars and practitioners to explore the intersections of Gothic literature, culture, and theory with artificial intelligences, automated creativity, and posthuman forms of subjectivity.

The Haunted Landscape: Ghosts, Magic and Lore

London Fortean Society. Conway Hall, London. 22 November 2025, 10:00 am–5:00 pm GM. Doors open: 9:30am

Whose claws are scratching at the church door? What’s that ghost tumbling over the moor? Who’s that figure cut into the earth? What can I do to lift this curse? Join us for a legendary trip through the Haunted Landscape at London Fortean Society’s day of expert talks on British ghosts, magic and folklore.

CFP: Romantic Retrospection: The British Association for Romantic Studies (BARS) International Conference 2026

BARS, University of Birmingham, UK, Wednesday 29 July–Friday 31 July 2026

Deadline: 29 September 2025

The British Association for Romantic Studies’ 2026 International Conference will take as its theme Romantic Retrospection. The Romantic period has frequently been associated with newness, [. . .] Yet one of the contradictions and therefore abiding instincts of Romanticism is the way its writers, artists, and thinkers invariably performed a double move: looking and moving forward by glancing and turning back. Romantics saw and even defined themselves in relation to what had come before, tried to understand and explore the present by means of the past, contemplated their own past lives and selves as well as cultural and national memory, shaped their works out of a multitude of traditions and inheritances to which they remained admiring and indebted as well as sceptical. [. . .] We invite contributions on any aspect of Romantic Retrospection in relation to the writing, culture, institutions, practices, and criticism of the Romantic period.

British Association for Victorian Studies (BAVS) Conference 2026

BAVS, University of Liverpool, 27–29 July 2026

Deadline: 30 November 2025

There will be no specific theme for the conference. Papers on any aspect of long-nineteenth-century studies from across Art History, Music, Maritime History, Theatre History, the History of Science, Literature and History, to name a few, are welcome.

CFP: British Society for Literature and Science: 21st Annual Conference

BSLS, University of Strathclyde, 9–11 April 2026

Deadline: 12 December 2025

The BSLS invites proposals for twenty-minute papers, or panels of three papers, or roundtables, on any subjects within the field of literature (broadly defined to include theatre, film, and television) and science (including medicine and technology). The BSLS remains committed to supporting and showcasing work on all aspects of literature and science, including (but not limited to) animal studies, disability studies, the medical humanities, eco-criticism and the environmental humanities, science fiction studies, the blue humanities, and more.

CFP: More Terrors than her Reason Could Justify: Romancing the Gothic 2026 Online Conference

On line. No date yet

Deadline: 30 April 2026

A 200th Anniversary Celebration of Ann Radcliffe’s Posthumous Publications

2026 marks the 200th anniversary of the publication of Ann Radcliffe’s final posthumous works. Often paid scant attention in critical writing on Radcliffe, they challenge a number of common assumptions about Radcliffean form. [. . .] This conference though wishes to put her in her contemporary context – rather than viewing her as an exception, we seek papers about her which place her in her contemporary literary, social and political context and papers which explore the works of her contemporaries: other Gothic trail-blazers like Eliza Parsons, Charlotte Smith, Regina Maria Roche, Eleanor Sleath, Clara Reeve and more! The programme for this year’s conference also seeks to step beyond Radcliffe’s moment to explore her legacy through an exploration of the ways in which women and people of marginalised genders have explored the potential of the Gothic.

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Open Graves, Open Minds: Halloween Newsletter 2025

Welcome to the Open Graves Open Minds Newsletter for October. We’re delighted to bring you our news and activities for the 2025 spooky season.

We are trying out a new way of publishing the newsletter, directly from the website (other options are simply too expensive for non-profit groups like ourselves); please forgive us if this is not working to your convenience. If you have subscribed via the website or are on our contacts list because of previous involvement, you will receive notifications of blog posts and the Newsletter. If you only want to receive the Newsletter, you can select this option, or you can unsubscribe.

Event: Becoming Wolf: The English Eerie and History of the UK Werewolf

On Saturday, 26 October at 3.00 pm, Sam George, Associate Professor, Co-Convener of the Open Graves, Open Minds project, will be speaking at the Fear in the Fens Film Festival  at Alive Corn Exchange, King’s Lynn. Her talk is listed on the festival programme as ‘Becoming Wolf: The English Eerie and History of the UK Werewolf’. There will be a showing of An American Werewolf in London. For tickets, please visit Fear in the Fens.  

Event: Vampiric Origins and Gothic Afterlives: John Polidori and St Pancras Old Church

Saturday, 24 January 2026; 2.30–3.30 pm. GMT. Virtual online tour and accompanying talk by Associate Professor Sam George (University of Hertfordshire, Co-Convenor, Open Graves, Open Minds Project).

Sam George delves into the origins of the first vampire tale in English, John Polidori’s The Vampyre (1816) and takes you on a virtual tour of the author’s unsettled resting place in St Pancras Old Church. Attendees will share in the untold story of Polidori’s missing grave and gothic afterlife and hear about OGOM’s exclusive research for the accompanying book: The Legacy of John Polidori: The Romantic Vampire and its Progeny.   

Ahead of the in-person tours which Sam will be leading, there will be a chance to join a Virtual Tour of Polidori’s unsettled resting place and an accompanying talk. Booking has opened for this exclusive online event: Tickets £10.00 or £8.00 concessions (student or unwaged) can be purchased via TicketPass.  

Sam is also working on her Gothic Tourism: John Polidori and St Pancras Old Church Project, which is supported by an I.A.A. Heritage Award from the University of Hertfordshire.

Publication: Sam George and Bill Hughes, eds., The Legacy of John Polidori: The Romantic Vampire and its Progeny

Related Media: Sam George on BBC Radio 4,  In Our Time: Polidori’s ‘The Vampyre’; The Conversation, ‘Vampire’s Rebirth’

Event: Spooky Stories, Being Human Festival

Sunday, 9 November; 14.00 pm. GMT.

Lee House (Sopwell Nunnery), Cottonmill Lane, St Albans
AL1 2BY

OGOM has a long history with the Being Human Festival. We have held events on a number of gothic topics from Redeeming the Wolf, to  The Black Vampyre: Gothic Visions of New Worlds  and Breaking through to Faery. This year the University of Hertfordshire are a Hub for the festival and OGOM is involved in the Spooky Stories family event in which professional storyteller Olivia Armstrong reimagines tales of fairies, werewolves and the Green Lady of Hertfordshire for a family audience. These original stories have been inspired by the research of academics Dr Sam George, Dr Kaja Franck and Dr Ceri Houlbrook. 

Tickets: This event is free, but tickets need to be booked via Being Human Festival: Spooky Stories  

Related Media: Sam George, ‘Fairies Weren’t Always Cute

Publication: Forthcoming co-edited book: Sam George and Bill Hughes, eds., Gothic Encounters with Enchantment and the Fairy Realm in Literature and Culture (MUP 2026).

Other events

We’ve listed some other forthcoming Halloween events on our blog post here: Events & CFPs: Fairytales, folklore, female Gothic, fairies, Dracula, fantasy.

Halloween Publications and Reading

Sam George’s article, ‘The Vampire’s Lost Reflection’ will appear in the October issue of Hellebore magazine. This publication has been described as ‘The most erudite journal on the current scene to deal with Paganism, magic and folklore in the realms of modern history, fiction and popular culture’ (Prof. Ronald Hutton).

In the upcoming ‘Mirror’ issue, Sam suggests how the folklore of reflections, portraits and shadows, influenced two of the greatest Gothic novels of the nineteenth century: Bram Stoker’s Dracula and Oscar Wilde’s The Picture of Dorian Gray.

Orders: Hellebore Magazine, ‘The Mirror’, no. 14 (2025) available to order here: https://helleborezine.com/products/hellebore14

Spooky Reading

Manchester University Press have created a unique page here for the OGOM Series of books. They have also produced a Spooky Seasonal Reading List, featuring Open Graves, Open Minds, Vampires and the Undead from the Enlightenment to the Present Day; In the Company of Wolves: Werewolves, Wolves and Wild Children; and The Legacy of John Polidori: The Romantic Vampire and Its Progeny, and many more. Do have a look and follow @GothicMUP for all their wonderful offers. 

Also, this week they are celebrating MUP’s commitment to #OpenAccess publishing! Until the end October, you can enjoy free digital access to the introductions to three OGOM books. Explore the free content here. Learn more about #OA at MUP Open Access.

CFP: Sea Changes – Mermaids and Selkies publications

Following our fabulous conference in September, ‘Sea Changes: The fairytale Gothic of mermaids, selkies, and enchanted hybrids of ocean and river’, we aim to compile another edited collection and a journal special issue on the conference theme. We will be issuing a CFP in the new year.

From the Archive

OGOM continues to build resources on its website and archive talks and events. Recent additions include our mermaid resources, following the Sea Changes conference, and our growing archive of talks. We are building a collection of bibliographies, timelines and other resources on fairies, vampires, werewolves, and other themes from OGOM’s research. This is for scholars and researchers at all levels, and we will be continually updating it; explore the options here (we are very open to suggestions and comments!).

For Halloween, you might like to browse our YouTube channel, including  

Sam George, ‘The Haunted Landscape: Old Stinker, the Hull Werewolf’ (at Conway Hall);

Sam George, ‘Bram Stoker’s Vampire’ (Dracula Lunchtime Bites);

Bill Hughes, ‘Vampires, werewolves, and Jane Austen’ (Interview with Brian from Toothpickings on vampires and werewolves, the folklore of these creatures and its transmutation into literature).

In Other News

Our most recent international conference, ‘Sea Changes: The fairytale Gothic of mermaids, selkies, and enchanted hybrids of ocean and river’, held on line and at The British Library on 6–8 September, was a huge success. OGOM would like to thank all the delegates and speakers for their wonderful contributions, Daisy and Ivan for hosting the online day and all the OGOM PhD students who were on the organising committee (Rebecca, Jane, Harley and Shabnam).

If you missed this fabulous event you can browse the Sea Changes Booklet and our Scenes from Sea Changes page for all the photos and comments. The online sessions were recorded and are now available to those who booked for this event (we may consider making them freely available at a later date).. 

Finally, OGOM would like to give a spooky Halloween welcome to our three new PhD students: Alex Hughes, who is studying fairies in the Celtic tradition; Silas Watson, who is studying Victorian revenants; and Colin Setford, who will be beginning a project on Varney the Vampire. We bid you welcome! And congratulations to Shabnam Ahsan who has submitted her thesis ‘Strange Creatures: National Identity and Representation of the Other in British Fairy-tale Collections, 1878–Present’. Sam is Shabnam’s primary supervisor; her research has been supported by OGOM. She received a bursary from the English Department at the University of Hertfordshire. We will add our new recruits to the OGOM people section of our website soon. You can read about the current research students here.

Have a fabulous Halloween and thank you for your supporting us.

Follow us

Do please look out for news items on our blog and follow us on social media for news and updates; we are very active on X/Twitter as @OGOMProject and @DrSamGeorge1 and we have a Facebook group, Open Graves, Open Minds Project.

We are also have accounts on Threads and Instagram as @ogom.project, and BlueSky as @ogomproject.bsky.social.

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OGOM Halloween: Spooky Events & Publications

OGOM would like to invite all their followers to join them for seasonal events and spooky reading during October. We’re excited to announce the following activities:

Event: Fear in the Fens Film Festival

Date: Saturday, 25 October.
Venue:  Alive Corn Exchange, King’s Lynn.

Speaker: Sam George, Associate Professor, University of Hertfordshire, Co-Convener of the Open Graves, Open Minds Project.

Talk: ‘Becoming Wolf: The English Eerie and History of the UK Werewolf’, Saturday, 25 October, 3.00 pm

Tickets: The above talk will be followed by a showing of An American Werewolf in London and Carry on Screaming (included in the ticket price). You can purchase tickets via Fear in the Fens.  This event is close to selling out so be quick if you can make it to Kings Lynn for some retro horror!!

Event: Vampiric Origins & Gothic Afterlives: John Polidori and St Pancras Old Church

Virtual Tour and Online Seminar.

Date: Sat 24th January, 2.30-3.30 pm. Booking is open for this and we want to launch it for Halloween but the tour itself will take place In January and be part of an ongoing project that begins in 2026.

Speaker: Associate Professor Sam George, University of Hertfordshire, Co-Convenor, Open Graves, Open Minds Project.

Description: Vampire expert, Associate Professor Sam George, delves into the origins of the first vampire tale in English, John Polidori’s The Vampyre (1816) and takes you on a virtual tour of his unsettled resting place in St Pancras Old Church. Attendees will share in the untold story of his gothic afterlife and glimpse into OGOM research for the accompanying book on Polidori.

Publication: Sam George and Bill Hughes, The Legacy of John Polidori: The Romantic Vampire and its Progeny

Related media: Sam George on BBC Radio 4,  In Our time: Polidori’s The Vampyre; The Conversation: Vampire’s Rebirth

Booking: via TicketPass 10.00 (or 8.00 concessions for students or the unwaged) Event:

Event: Spooky Stories at the Being Human Festival

Date: 9 November, 14.00.

Venue: Lee House (Sopwell Nunnery), Cottonmill Lane, St Albans
AL1 2BY

Description: Professional storyteller Olivia Armstrong will reimagine tales of fairies, werewolves and the Green Lady of Hertfordshire for a family audience. These original stories have been inspired by the research of academics Dr Sam George, Dr Kaja Franck and Dr Ceri Houlbrook. 

Tickets: This event: Spooky Stories, Being Human Festival is free but tickets need to be booked via Being Human Festival Spooky Stories.  

Related Media: Sam George, Fairies Weren’t Always Cute (they used to drink human blood and kidnap children).

Publication: Forthcoming co-edited book: Sam George and Bill Hughes, Gothic Encounters with Enchantment and the Fairy Realm in Literature and Culture (MUP 2026)

Halloween Reading

Dr Sam George’s article, ‘The Vampire’s Lost Reflection’ will appear in the October issue of Hellebore Magazine.  This publication has been described as ‘The most erudite journal on the current scene to deal with Paganism, magic and folklore in the realms of modern history, fiction and popular culture’ (Ronald Hutton).

In the upcoming ‘Mirror’ issue, Sam George argues that the folklore of reflections, portraits and shadows, influenced two of the greatest Gothic novels of the 19th century: Bram Stoker’s Dracula and Oscar Wilde’s The Picture of Dorian Gray.

Orders: Hellebore Magazine, ‘The Mirror’, no. 14 (2025) available to order here

Spooky Reading List: Manchester University Press have produced a Spooky Seasonal Reading List featuring Open Graves, Open Minds, Vampires and the Undead from the Enlightenment to the Present Day; In the Company of Wolves: Werewolves, Wolves and Wild Children; The Legacy of John Polidori: The Romantic Vampire and Its Progeny and much more. Do have a look and follow @GothicMUP for all their wonderful offers!!

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Events & CFPs: Fairytales, folklore, female Gothic, fairies, Dracula, fantasy

There are some fantastic events coming up – all our favourite themes! – but first we’d like to thank everyone again who participated in the Sea Changes conference and helped make it such a fabulous event. We have reviews and pictures of the event on our Scenes from Sea Changes page here. We also have the results and entries of our Mermaid Flash Fiction competition; these are all richly inventive and imaginative and it was hard to choose a winner.

Troubling Wonder – Online Symposium on Fairy-Tale Studies

1 October 2025 3:00–4 October 2025 7:30 PM BST; on line

There is still time to catch the last two days of this exciting event–we apologise for leaving it so late to post.

Join us for four days of fresh perspectives and inspiring research into the world of fairy tales. The programme features panels on a wide range of topics, along with these special sessions:

✨ Book Presentation: Justice in 21st-Century Fairy Tales and the Power of Wonder (2025), with Cristina Bacchilega (University of Hawai‘i-Mānoa) and Pauline Greenhill (University of Winnipeg)
✨ Special Issue Presentation: “Norm and Transgression in the Fairy-Tale Tradition” (2025), Marvels & Tales, with Alessandro Cabiati (Ca’ Foscari University of Venice) and Lewis Seifert (Brown University)
✨ Lecture: Creative and Critical Approaches to Fairy Tales and Disability Studies, with Beth O’Brien (University of Birmingham), founder of Disabled Tales and author of Wolf Siren (2025)

Owen Davies and Ceri Houlbrook on folklore

7 October 2025, 6:30–7:30 pm BST; on line

Join leading folklore experts Owen Davies and Ceri Houlbrook as they present their groundbreaking book Folklore: A Journey Through the Past and Present, the definitive guide to British folklore that travels from village rituals and fairy tales to UFO legends and internet fanfiction. 

Travelling through a landscape of witches, wizards and wicker men, Owen and Ceri will reveal how folklore has been researched and written about in the past and show how it continues to be lived in the present. They will explore folklore in all its remarkable variations, providing readers with a valuable toolkit for understanding how to interpret the diverse examples given.

Folklore: Ceri Houlbrook and Tabitha Stanmore in Conversation

9 October 2025, 6:30 pm; The Lounge, Royal Northern College of Music, Manchester

More from Ceri Houlbrook:

Author Ceri Holbrook appears in conversation about her new book, co-written by Owen Davies, Folklore: A Journey Through the Past and Present. Ceri will be joined by Tabitha Stanmore, author of CUNNING FOLK: Life in the Era of Practical Magic. The authors will be in conversation with Mel Giles, Professor in European Prehistory at the University of Manchester.

Fee Greening in conversation: Katharine Briggs’s Dictionary of Fairies

7 October 2025; 7–8:30pm GMT+1; on line

The Folkore Society

Artist Fee Greening, inspired by Gothic fairytale and medieval illumination, illustrates a new edition of Briggs’s Dictionary of Fairies.

Gothic fiction & The Female Writer

6 November 2025; 6:30–8:45pm GMT; Friends’ Meeting House, 6 Mount Street, Manchester, M2 5NS

Seed Talks

How have horror and ghost stories challenged gender norms? Explore the feminist side of Gothic fiction. With Q&A.

From a Cornfield to the Gothic: An Appreciation of the Scarecrow

21 November 2025, 7–8:30pm GMT+1; on line

The Folkore Society

Juliette Wood looks appreciatively at the history and traditions of scarecrows

Dracula Lunchtime Bites 2: Queering the Slayer: from Dracula to Buffy

15 October 2025, 12:30 PM–1:00 PM; on line

The Derby Dracula

Marginalised and misunderstood, the vampire is usually more so associated with queerness than its counterpart the slayer. In this talk, Claire Mead explores what’s at stake in a queered interpretation of the slayer from the original Dracula to modern depictions, to understand how this at first sight archetypical hero subverts our assumptions.

CFP: Fantasy’s Present Pasts: The inaugural European Conference on the Fantastic

23–25 June 2026, Centre for Fantasy and the Fantastic, University of Glasgow

Deadline: 12 December 2025

The Centre for Fantasy and the Fantastic at the University of Glasgow is delighted to invite proposals for ‘Fantasy’s Present Pasts’. This will be the first in a series of annual European Conferences on the Fantastic organised by groups of scholars across the continent, currently invhostory historical fictionolving clusters in Denmark, Germany, Poland, Scandinavia and the UK.

‘Fantasy’s Present Pasts’ invites innovative papers that explore works of Fantasy or consider genre culture more broadly. However, it focuses particularly on the ways in which speculative genres engage with the interplay of past and present. It hopes to explore the kinds of history on which works of Fantasy currently draw; the ways in which pasts present themselves in genre texts; and the manners in which we currently model the diverse pasts of genres across different cultures and traditions. As the inaugural conference in a new series, it hopes to take stock of where we are in genre studies and collaboratively to think through where we would like to get to.

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Reflections: OGOM Sea Changes

We’re pleased to report that our 3-day conference Sea Changes: The fairytale Gothic of mermaids, selkies, and enchanted hybrids of ocean and river at the British Library and online was a resounding success and an absolute pleasure to attend. A truly international affair, we had delegates attending from Australia, Canada, the Czech Republic, Estonia, France, Germany, Greece, Iceland, India, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Mexico, Norway, Poland, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Trinidad and Tobago, the UK and the USA.  

OGOM would like to thank The British Library for hosting us and all the delegates for such high quality and diverse papers and for their warm and generous company throughout the three days.  The online conference pack is brimming with innovative and compelling books and publications from all those who attended. It was a truly memorable and moving experience for OGOM to celebrate fifteen years with you (especially in light of Bill’s gruelling cancer treatment). We couldn’t help getting a little teary at the end because of this! If you missed some or all of the conference do have a look at our fantastic Sea Changes Booklet on the web pages

And consider submitting to our next CFP. We have a botanical gothic theme coming up next and then we will be returning to hybrids with Winged Beings: Enchanted Hybrids of the Sky and Air. We will be in touch with delegates about submitting to our Sea Changes publications in the meantime; an opportunity for contributors to make even more of a splash!

OGOM at the British Library

Following a full and rich conference day online it was exciting to see the in-person event unfold with all the signage and screens going up at the Knowledge Centre with the OGOM logo and Sea Changes design.

We also had an Open Graves, Open Minds display table with OGOM books, posters, postcards and fliers offering 30% off purchases for delegates from our publisher MUP.

We would like to say a big thank you to our Keynote Speakers: Betsy Cornwell, Dr Katie Garner and Prof. Catherine Spooner for being so inspiring and sharing their wonderful research. Betsy’s selkie novel Tides has featured in my YA Fiction and the Gothic module for some years so it was a privilege to be able to introduce her in person and hear about her selkie-inspired memoir Ring of Salt.

Bill introduced Katie’s keynote online and she seamlessly interwove her experience with humanities funding with her research into Romantic Scottish mermaids to give a creative and informative talk for Postgraduates and ECRs. Catherine is a long-standing contributor to OGOM, having been on this remarkable journey with us for fifteen years. She surprised us by saying how much OGOM has influenced the direction of her own research before delighting us with her take on the sparklification of the mermaid figure in its various manifestations. 

I shared my own research into Ningyō and the rise of the fake museum mermaid, whilst also exploring the mummified mermaid as a sacred object in Japan. I was excited to chair the lively panel on ‘Water Women of Japan’ following this, with papers by Associate Professor Joseph Crawford on yuri manga and Dr Izumi Nagai from Osaka University on the sea woman in Tanka poetry.   

Our OGOM postgraduates excelled in helping with the organisation and registration of the conference and in delivering their own research papers. Harley was able to present to her idol Betsy Cornwell in a paper on adolescence in Tides and Rebecca’s paper on Faustian bargains was name checked by Catherine Spooner! Jane presented her research on the Lamia figure in the ‘Mermaids in Poetry’ panel. Shabnam, having submitted her thesis, presented on mermaid transgression and transformation in Ruth Manning-Sanders’s work, an important contribution to the ‘Oceanic Postcolonialism’ panel. Finally, Deborah presented her first ever conference paper on female sexual expression through merfolk in the panel on ‘Aquatic Romance’.

Elsewhere Bill enchanted us with his knowledge of contemporary selkie fiction and OGOMer Ivan treated us to a paper on ‘The Forsaken Merman’, landscape and memory.

It was a thrill to see Daisy presenting for the first time as Dr Butcher, following a successful Viva and exploring Hans Andersen’s Sea Witch in the wonderful ‘Gothic Little Mermaid’ panel. Daisy and Ivan were brilliant as the hosts of our online day which wasn’t easy to negotiate. They have our gratitude. They also looked after the creative part of the day, the mermaid flash fiction (winners to be announced shortly).    

If you attended the conference look out for the photo slide show and comments page coming soon and keep in touch with us until the next time by following the blog and our social media channels:  @OGOMProject @ogomproject.bsky.social

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Sea Changes – only one week away!

We are excited to reveal that the box of printed programmes for Sea Changes has arrived in the OGOM offices! With only a week to go it won’t be long before we welcome all of our wonderful delegates from around the world. If you are going to be joining us, please join in the build up to the big day on social media #SeaChanges #GothicMermaids ahead of the conference.

We have been posting a mermaid a day in A-Z of Mermaids on social media. Delve and give us an RT if you like it!  

If you haven’t secured any tickets to join us in person at the British Library, you can still take part in our activities by joining us online on Friday 6th at the day rate of 35.00 or 25.00 concessions. Online day tickets are available here. We will be joined by our expert international speakers on merfolk plus Selkie writer Betsy Cornwell author of acclaimed novel Tides and Dr Katie Garner on Romanticism’s Scottish Mermaids. We’ll also be welcoming back esteemed OGOM members Dr Daisy Butcher of #botanicalgothic fame and Dr Ivan Phillips for some hosting and mermaid flash fiction writing. See you very soon!   Beyond excited!

 

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Booking is open for Sea Changes: The fairytale Gothic of mermaids, selkies and enchanted hybrids of ocean and river

Collier Smithers, A Race with Mermaids and Tritons (1885)
Collier Smithers, A Race with Mermaids and Tritons (1885)

We’re beyond excited to announce that booking has opened for our 3-day international conference: Sea Changes: The fairytale Gothic of mermaids, selkies, and enchanted hybrids of ocean and river. Venue: The British Library, London, UK (and online), Date: 6–8 September 2025 (6th online).

The conference engages with cultural representations of mermaids, selkies and kindred beings: fabulous, enchanted creatures from oceans, rivers, and lakes all over the world. We look at narratives of merfolk and their kin in the light of their Gothic aspects and their connection with folklore, dwelling on the enchantment of their strange fluidity.

You can view the full programme on our conference pages (click through to get the papers in each panel). Places for the British Library in-person days are limited as they are reserved for delegates, but we invite new attendees to join us online on Saturday 6th

Online attendees will experience a unique day of international research, creativity and enchantment. Panels include: Hybridity, monstrosity and taxonomy;  Aquatic romance;  Mermaids and otherness;  Romanticism and sirens; Myth and storytelling; Traumas, threats, and transformations: Traditional and contemporary selkie stories from Scotland to the Arctic; ‘The Little Mermaid’ and adaptation; Mermaids and the aquatic environment.    

Betsy Cornwell, author of acclaimed selkie novel Tides will be joining us to introduce her memoir Ring of Salt, which again draws on the Selkie myth.  And there will be an opportunity to win some book prizes in our Mermaid Flash Fiction competition. There is also an unmissable chance to learn more about research funding in the area of mythology and the blue humanities with Dr Katie Garner of St Andrews University. She will be leading a bespoke workshop for ECRs and Doctoral Students on her ‘Forging the mermaid in Romantic Scotland’ project.

Tickets are 35.00 for the day or 25.00 concessions (unwaged or students). You’ll need to book quickly to avoid disappointment via our online booking site. We can’t wait to see you for a day of enchanting merfolk and gothic fairy tales!

Twin-tailed Mermaid, Roma, Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana 

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Sea Changes with Molly the Merrow: Latest news

A few words on how the Sea Changes conference planning is progressing. First, let me introduce you to Molly the Merrow, from the waters off the coast of Ireland.

Female merrows, as you can see, are very beautiful; sadly, merrow-men are hideous.

Molly the Merrow v. Gomez
Molly the Merrow v. Gomez

However, Gomez the cat did not share the common view of Molly’s beauty, and savagely attacked her – possibly mistaking her for a fish.

We now have the final version of the programme (we think!); we had a few cancellations, sadly but we think it’s settled now. There is a web page for it, accessible from the menus, and you can download a PDF version too. It is being sent to designers/printers, and we’ll soon have a really attractive glossy version available – downloadable, and handed out as a souvenir to those who attend in person.

There’s also a concise timetable that lists the sessions and their times without the fine detail. All these are available from the website menu, with other pages of information about travel and accommodation. In addition, there’s a rich treasury of resources such as bibliographies about mermaids, selkies, and their kin which we will be adding to and revising continually – even after the conference is over, providing a permanent site for research.

We have put the abstracts (and speakers’ biographies) up on a page where you can see speakers and paper titles then, by clicking on these, expand them accordion-style to reveal the full detail.

We are very excited! The abstracts you’ve submitted are all fascinating, suggesting intelligent and innovative research, covering such themes and perspectives as: hybridity, the eco-Gothic and Gothic generally, aquatic romance, gender, sexuality, and feminism; myth-making and storytelling, folklore and fairy tale; postcolonialism, posthumanism, and Critical Theory Narratives of merfolk and kindred creatures that you have explored are in such diverse media as: epic and lyric poetry, music, opera, painting, ballet, and contemporary novels, YA and adult, that rework folklore into a variety of narratives. You have uncovered representations from antiquity through the Restoration and eighteenth century, then the Romantic period, the Victorian age, and finally the present day.

Molly and her tragigic little cousin (beautifully illustrated by Christian Birmingham)
Molly and her tragigic little cousin (beautifully illustrated by Christian Birmingham)

There are sirens here, and water-nymphs, the nykur and the Kraken, Sea-Apes, kelpies, ningyōs, lamia, and undines – an entire bestiary of beings oceanic and riverine. Famous incarnations such as Mama Wata, Melusine, and Jenny Greenteeth appear too.

These water-beings are global; they have swum from Ireland and Scotland, Scandinavia, Italy, Greece, countries in Africa, China, India, Japan, Singapore, Mexico, and Southern USA. This parallels the global provenance of our speakers and the migration of all the heterogeneous ideas that have coalesced together.

Though diverse, and written from a variety of stances, common themes and interconnections emerge, which justifies having a conference on these enchanted Gothic creatures in the first place.

The plenaries contribute to this colourful diversity, with talks on significance of the selkie for autobiographical dives into the self; Romantic Scotland and the creation of the mermaid figure; the hybrid nature of the Japanese ningyō; glittery mermaids, sexuality, and New Materialism.

Thank you all for being the foundation for what we expect to be a wonderful conference – we couldn’t do it without you.

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1816: The Year Without a Summer – Polidori, the musical; and OGOM research

John William Polidori, by F. G. Gainsford, oil on canvas, circa 1816.
NPG 991. © National Portrait Gallery, London.
John William Polidori, by F. G. Gainsford, oil on canvas, circa 1816. NPG 991. © National Portrait Gallery, London.

OGOM’s book on John William Polidori (1795-1821) (who wrote the first vampire tale in English, ‘The Vampyre’, in 1819), The Legacy of John Polidori: The Romantic Vampire and its Progeny has been out nearly a year.

Now, the perfect accompaniment has arisen: a musical about Polidori: 1816, to be staged from August onwards in London and then Cambridge. And we are flattered that its creators, Natasha Atkinson and Nat Riches were inspired and assisted in part by our website and the pioneering research of Dr Matt Beresford, who gained his doctorate on Polidori’s life and work under the supervision of Dr Sam George. Nat told us in an email:

During research, a large portion of the information particularly about Polidori and the dynamic between him and Byron came from reading Matthew Beresford’s PhD thesis on this subject – it was such an interesting read, and definitely played a role in how we approached characterising Byron and Polidori!

And also, ‘Reading your website and work was absolutely a factor in shaping our approach to the show’.

Matt was one of two students to receive a bursary from UH to study for a PhD under OGOM (‘The Lord Byron / John Polidori Relationship and the Development of the Early Nineteenth-Century Literary Vampire’). We later staged a Polidori symposium and developed the research that was presented there into chapters for our book. Following this research, we are organising a Polidori Gothic tour, planned for October 2025, based around the research Sam George undertook on the mystery surrounding his burial place in St Pancras Old Church.

St Pancras Old Church exterior. © 2024 Sam George.
St Pancras Old Church exterior. © 2024 Sam George.

Polidori as hero

Polidori has been resurrected in a curious way quite a few times; he has featured as a fictional character in several novels and films, as vampire and as victim, as we recount in the introduction to our book. And sometimes he has been treated quite atrociously (see Ken Russel’s over-the-top 1986 film Gothic). It’s refreshing, then, to see a fictional Polidori treated with respect; this talented young man who died too early deserves it at last.

Natasha and Nat’s musical sounds fascinating, both dramatically and in terms of its metatextual use of music; we’re honoured to have contributed in a small way. As we intended with our book, the musical aims to redeem Polidori and rescue him from the neglect he has suffered. As Nat says:

I particularly wanted to tell Polidori’s story and do justice to his tale, which is often discarded in favour of the more famous writers who were present.

1816: The Year Without a Summer

1816 at The Camden Fringe banner

The haunted summer is adapted once more, this time in the form of a musical.

Villa Diodata, Lake Geneva, Switzerland
Villa Diodata, Lake Geneva, Switzerland

Bringing to life Polidori’s diary of the summer at Lake Geneva, 1816 shines a new light on the events of the time spent at the Villa Diodati, focusing on the long-neglected stories behind the towering legacies of Lord Byron and Mary and Percy Shelley. Combining Romantic-era music with musical theatre, the one-hour-long comedy-drama by Natasha Atkinson and Nat Riches will bring the Romantics to present-day audiences at the Camden Fringe this August 6th and 7th.

Nat and Natasha studied music together in high school before going on to degrees in Science and Law, respectively, at Cambridge. Despite this, they continued to pursue their creative passions, culminating in this project. Uniting art and sciences, as Polidori and the Shelleys did in their own lives and literary works, is a key theme running through the musical.

The show’s focus on the impact Polidori had on the vampire genre, and the mistreatment of both him and Claire Clairmont, offers a new perspective on the summer and the literary greats who were present. Polidori narrates the events as they are told in his diary, playing his role as both a member of the group and as the one documenting everything that occurred during the summer of 1816. His solo song, ‘The Vampyre’, explores in great depth how his relationship with Byron inspired the creation of his novel.

Lord Byron, by Richard Westall (1813). NPG 4243. © National Portrait Gallery, London.
Lord Byron, by Richard Westall (1813). NPG 4243. © National Portrait Gallery, London.

The writing of the Romantics plays a central role in 1816 and is adapted both into the script and into various songs throughout the musical. An extract from Byron’s poem ‘To Thomas Moore’ is sung as a toast with Percy Shelley. Claire’s ballad is structured as if it is a letter to Byron and is made up of various snippets from her actual writings. The music itself takes inspiration from multiple places, with more typically Classical sounds in the earlier songs, including a strong Mozart and Beethoven influence for the opening. As the tension rises, more Romantic sounds are used, such as the Rachmaninoff-esque, heavy textures in Frankenstein, and rhythms similar to those of composers such as Liszt, who himself was greatly influenced by Byron’s poetry.

1816 is being performed at Theatro Technis in Camden, London, at 9pm on the 6th and 7th August 2025, with further runs in London in late September, and Cambridge in mid-October. The link below contains tickets and more information about the show:

https://www.theatrotechnis.com/whatson/1816%3A-the-year-without-a-summer

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Gramarye: Rats and vampires, dark fairies, mermaid, and more magic

The latest issue of Gramarye, the journal of the Chichester Centre for Fairy Tales, Fantasy and Speculative Fiction is now out. This journal is always beautifully designed, and the current issue features articles by Sam and myself, from OGOM.

Sam’s article is ‘The mythical interactions between the Pied Piper, Dracula and Nosferatu: Rat kings and the rate as vampiric totem animal’.

Sam George's article

And I have this article in the journal: ‘Generic hybridity and the critique of instrumantalism in the enchanted landscapes of Dark Fairy Romance’.

Bill Hughes's article
Simon Young's article

There are many more magical delights in this issue, with fiction and poetry alongside critical essays and book reviews. Of particular interest is Simon Young’s ‘Like a mermaid: The evolution of mermaids in British and Irish similes, 1850–2000. A brilliant essay that would make excellent background reading for OGOM’s September 2005 conference, Sea Changes: The fairytale Gothic of mermaids, selkies, and enchanted hybrids of ocean and river.

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