Petition: Save undergraduate Humanities at the University of Hertfordshire

Please do sign the petition below and defend undergraduate humanities studies!!

Thomas Gradgrind apprehends his children Louisa and Tom at the Circus, Hard Times by Charles Dickens
Thomas Gradgrind apprehends his children Louisa and Tom at the Circus, Hard Times by Charles Dickens

The University of Hertfordshire’s Humanities Department has been the home and occasional sponsor of the OGOM Project from the beginning, deriving from Dr Sam George’s research and teaching there along with other colleagues such as Dr Ivan Phillips, and fostering a group of brilliant and inspiring PhD candidates.

Many scholars at UH in English Literature, History, Folklore, Philosophy, and other disciplines have done outstanding research, earning international acclaim, with high REF ratings and recognition of their impact; OGOM research scored highly here (though such rating is part of the problem!).

Now, the University is scrapping the undergraduate teaching of humanities. This teaching, too, has been widely acclaimed. We must stress that the research and the Masters and PhD programmes will continue, so current and prospective postgraduates need not be anxious. But this is a terrible action, nevertheless; the knowledge acquired from a humanities education can play a significant part in the development of a healthy, critical member of society. Many of OGOM’s postgraduate researchers emerged out of the undergraduate English Literature programme at Herts, and Sam’s Gothic modules played a central part here.

Facts, facts, facts

Power Loom Weaving (Wellcome Collection)
Power Loom Weaving (Wellcome Collection)

The case for defending the humanities involves far more than just producing employable graduates with ‘critical thinking’ skills. Authentic critical thinking in the humanities disciplines is crucial to understanding what it is to be human. Engaging with literature, language, history and philosophy subverts the dominant Gradgrindian ideology which sees only brute facts and not the living interpretation of them. It treats culture and even human beings as means rather than ends in themselves; it is an ideology that corrupts social life and threatens the world itself. We must resist the neoliberal transformation of higher education into an industry that demeans creative thinking in the sciences as much as the arts and humanities.

William Bell Scott, King Arthur Carried to the Land of Enchantment (1847)
William Bell Scott, King Arthur Carried to the Land of Enchantment (1847)

Much of our research at OGOM has turned towards an inquiry into a neglected aspect of Gothic literature and art: a Gothic enchantment that, in transforming the otherness repressed by utilitarian rationality, reveals a world emancipated from its disenchanted state. This is a utopian (in its positive sense) vision; it is a carnivalesque circus of the imagination, though not without the thrill of terror. Through this we hope to develop ways of critiquing the instrumental reason which threatens to turn everything into things for manipulation and exchange, uncovering instead the potential for new ways of being.

Petition here:

https://c.org/KQRsB6TKt4

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Events: folklore, folk horror, zombies, fantasy, fairy tales, mermaids, Gothic cinema, Ann Radcliffe

Some very exciting events coming up; some are very soon, so be sure to catch them! First, a reminder that Dr Sam George has two talks forthcoming, one next week:

First, on 5 May, ‘Gothic Fairyland: A dark history of butterfly-winged fairies’, at the international on-line seminar ‘Reinterpretations of Celtic and Iberian Fairies Myths & Lore’.

Then, on 20 May, another on-line talk, ‘The Luck of the Ningyo: Japanese human-fish Yokai and the rise of the fake museum mermaid’.

Lily-of-the-valley Customs: a Window on France

Cozette Griffin-Kremer, The Folklore Society, Tuesday 5 May 2026, 19:00 BST (on line)

There is a wealth of customs associated with the lily-of-the-valley (Convallaria majalis L.) in France and this can only be a sampling that runs from the iconic plant’s botanical being, on to how it is associated with bringing good luck, and hence, with some of the famous people who have used the muguet to construct their own legends.

The History of Folk Horror

Dr Barbara Chamberlin, Seed Talks, Wednesday, May 6  •  7 PM – 9:30 PM GMT+1 (on line)

Folk horror taps into our fascination with fear, superstition and the uncanny, revealing how ancient stories continue to echo in our modern lives. In this talk, Dr Barbara Chamberlin traces the genre from M. R. James’s ghost stories to cult classics like Witchfinder General, Blood on Satan’s Claw, and The Wicker Man, and today’s revivals with new voices and perspectives.

The History of Zombies

Dr Maisha Wester, Seed Talks, Monday, May 11  •  6:30 PM – 8:30 PM GMT+1 (online workshop)

This 2-hour workshop will explore the origins and transformations of one of the world’s most popular monsters, through films such as I Walked with a Zombie (1943), Night of the Living Dead (1968), Shaun of the Dead (2004) and more.

Telling it Otherwise: How Fairy Tales Foster Diversity in Children’s Literature

Anna Finozzi, In-person workshop, Buckingham House Seminar Room, Murray Edwards College, University of Cambridge; Monday, 11 May, 5:30 pm – 7:00 pm

This workshop takes fairy tales as a lens through which to examine how children’s literature shapes ideas of identity and difference, paying particular attention to the dynamics of visibility and invisibility: who is represented, who is excluded, and why.

An Evening of Fairy Tales & Folklore

Dr Sharon Blackie, Seed Talks, Tuesday, May 12  •  7 PM – 9:30 PM GMT+1

Discover how fairy tales have guided women through the ages – and why we need them now more than ever. Followed by Q&A. Fairy tales are powerful because at their heart is transformation. Long before princesses were pink and perfect, these stories showed women how to face the unfaceable, find hidden strength, and transform challenges into growth and empowerment.

GIFCon 2026: Technologies of the Fantastic

Centre for Fantasy and the Fantastic, Wednesday, May 13-Friday, May 15  •  12 PM-5 PM GMT+1 (on line)

Join us for GIFCon, a three-day virtual conference featuring researchers worldwide discussing technology and fantasy.
Though scholars have attempted to clarify the division between science fiction and fantasy by suggesting that the latter is solely concerned with the impossible whilst the former is concerned only with fact, such binaries disregard the foundations of the fantastic prevalent in science fiction

The History of Mermaids, Sea Spirits & Women

Dr Monica Germana, Seed Talks, Friends’ Meeting House, Manchester, England; Wednesday, May 20  •  6:30 PM – 8:45 PM

Dive beneath the surface of mermaid lore, tracing their long histories and what they may reveal about wider society. Followed by Q&A.
Mermaids and sea creatures of various kinds have existed in legends and myths from coastal areas all over the world. They are often, though not always, female, and their gender also performs an ambiguous role in relation to human models of femininity, womanhood, and heterosexuality; mermaids, selkies, and female sea creatures can uncannily be familiar and unfamiliar, charming and repulsive, caring and deadly.

Women in White and the New Gothic Cinema: Reinventing the Gothic Heroine

Prof. Catherine Spooner; Ann Radcliffe, Then and Now; Showroom CinemaSheffield City Centre, England; Thursday, June 18  •  6 PM – 9 PM

There has been a revival of interest in the Gothic heroine in the twenty-first century, in big budget films such as Crimson Peak, Poor Things, Nosferatu, Frankenstein and Wuthering Heights. This talk traces the history of the Gothic heroine back to the eighteenth-century novels of Ann Radcliffe, the highest paid author of her day. Paying particular attention to costume and the iconic image of the woman in white running from a dark house, Professor Catherine Spooner explores the ways in which contemporary writers and film-makers have positioned the Gothic heroine as embodying feminist resistance and dark romance.

Editing A Sicilian Romance

Prof. Robert Miles; Ann Radcliffe, Then and Now (podcast)

Emeritus Professor Robert Miles is editing Radcliffe’s A Sicilian Romance as part of The Cambridge Edition of the Works of Ann Radcliffe.
From the evolution of Radcliffe’s poeticism to her defining of the Gothic heroine, Miles highlights the importance and brilliance of Radcliffe’s second novel.

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Review: Dynamic and enthralling: A review of Kip Williams’s Dracula, featuring Cynthia Erivo (by Rebecca Greef)

Dracula, writ. and dir. by Kip Williams, Noel Coward Theatre, London. Review by Rebecca Greef

Recently I got to experience Cynthia Erivo’s enthralling performance in Kip Williams’s Dracula stage show. In the one-woman show, Erivo uses costumes, clever camera work, and some pre-recorded dialogue to play every character from Bram Stoker’s 1897 novel. From Johnathan Harker to the Count himself, Erivo dramatises the personalities and peculiarities of Stoker’s eclectic cast to tell us Stoker’s story.

The atmosphere was dark and mysterious, with some intriguing staging choices in places bringing a mix of modern technology and old-time theatre. The use of on-stage camera operators initially felt intrusive, but it took no time at all for them to seamlessly blend into the show, and they more than deserved their own bows at the end. The way Erivo interacted with the pre-recorded sections was mainly via a large screen that overlayed her live performance with the footage. Sometimes it was difficult to not just watch the screen, and I made sure to focus on Erivo herself whenever possible! The use of costume to differentiate characters was useful, with Erivo using accent and body language well to distinguish each role. As someone who recently re-read the book, I found it relatively easy to follow along, but my partner, who hasn’t read it, found some of the story confusing because of the single actor. Their costumes and mannerisms added humour in places, with Van Helsing strongly reminding me of Ian McKellen’s Gandalf.

I found the first third (mainly Johnathan Harker’s increasingly paranoid journals) a little rushed. Erivo’s delivery was flawless, but it definitely felt like an audiobook kicked up to 1.5x speed at times. As soon as further characters entered, the pace slowed and the show was easier to follow! Cynthia Erivo’s small snippet of singing was so strong, and a testament to her musical skill as well as her acting. As a Wicked fan myself, it added a sensational layer to the performance for audience members that may only know her from those films. It also validated my day of singing ‘Drac-ula, we’re going to see Drac-u-laaaa’ to the tune of ‘Popular’ . . . The ending was beautifully staged, raising the tension slowly and holding you captivated until the last moment.

I’ve not seen any other stage versions of Dracula, but I think this performance stands strong as a representation of what Dracula can be: far removed from Hamilton Deane’s 1924 Derby production, but iconic in its own way. It was also fun to see OGOM’s very own Dr Sam George’s contributions to the show programme in the flesh! You can access this brochure in PDF via Sam’s post on the ‘Undying Allure of the Stage Vampire’. Overall, I thoroughly enjoyed the show and Cynthia Erivo’s performance. I appreciated the quirky nature of the staging with some moments that will definitely be my new defining version of events in the story.

Programme notes by Sam George

Kip Williams’s Dracula is being shown at the Noel Coward Theatre in London until 30May 2026.

Rebecca Greef is a doctoral student in Literature at the University of Hertfordshire. Her thesis, ‘Deals with the Devil: The Faustian bargain and its role in Young Adult fiction’ focuses on the Faustian bargain trope in Young Adult fiction, new adult fiction, and the Gothic.

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Folklore and the Gothic Research Seminar, 20 May 1.30-2.30, online

The Luck of the Ningyo: Japanese human-fish Yokai and the rise of the fake museum mermaid

Talk by Dr Sam George, 20 May 2026, 1.30-2.30. BST

As a follower of OGOM, you are invited to attend a research seminar hosted online by the University of Hertfordshire. The research paper will last around 40 mins with 20 mins for discussion and questions. Its free, but you will need to register via the booking site at Ticket Press here. Ticket holders will receive their joining instructions via email a couple of days before the event. I had to cancel this earlier in April, so I’m really hoping you can join me for an excursion into the world of these spectacular mermaids on May 20.

Speaker: Sam George, Associate Professor of Research, University of Hertfordshire  

Title: ‘The Luck of the Ningyo: Japanese human-fish Yokai and the rise of the fake museum mermaid’ 

Abstract: This research seminar will explore the representation of the Ningyo or Japanese human fish Yokai; a creature of genderless hybridity that functions as both a prophecy beast and a Mer Monster. Sam will chart its fascinating history, from the earliest sightings in folk tales and chronicles of Japan, to its manifestation in new media in the present.  She argues that Ningyo were made monstrous through Japan’s interactions with the West when mummified or dried specimens were sold to Europeans for show in the nineteenth century. Descriptions of these mummified or desiccated mermaid creations are decidedly gothic and bring the Ningyo within the realms of the weird and the eerie. In Japan, however, they are sacred objects, inviting good fortune and acting as amulets in Buddhist or Shinto shrines, where they have lain preserved for centuries.

Microsoft Teams Event 20 May, 1.30-2.30. BST.

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Review: Francis Young, Fairies: A History (by Alex Hughes)

Alex Hughes is a member of the OGOM Project and a doctoral student in Literature at the University of Hertfordshire. His PhD focuses on the various depictions of fairies in literature and popular consciousness during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.

Francis Young, Fairies: A History (Oxford: Polity: 2026). Review by Alex Hughes.

Francis Young, Fairies: A History (cover)

The ongoing scholarly interest in fairies has led to the publication of many books covering many aspects of these folkloric beings. Francis Young’s latest book, Fairies: A History is an excellent addition to the field. Young examines the many changes the fairy has gone through, from their origins in ancient times down to their presence in contemporary culture.

Francis Young, Fairies: A History (Table of Contents)
Francis Young, Fairies: A History (Table of Contents)

From the start readers are made aware of the complexity of fairies, who refuse to fit neatly into any firm definition or classification. Similarly, Young demonstrates that the fairies do not belong to any one religion. While various spirits and/or ‘godlings’ existed in ancient Europe, the fairies are as much creations of early Christianity as they are survivals of earlier paganism.

Young shows that the attempts of Christians to find a place for fairies in their theology was a difficult one. The typical approach of the established Church was to demonise the fairies, though this was far from the only interpretation taken by Christians. For some, the fairies were benign spirits. This discourse would reach its height during the Reformation, when the fairies were associated with accusations of witchcraft.

By the time of the Enlightenment, views of fairies had changed greatly. There was a tendency of elite thinkers to outright deny the existence of fairies, viewing them as a survival of credulous superstition. However, Young demonstrates that there were plenty of people who still argued for their existence. Furthermore, the period saw a growing cultural interest in the fairies, with depictions of them in the arts becoming increasingly popular.

Young devotes the seventh chapter of his book to examining the presence of fairy folklore in those parts of the world settled by Europeans during the age of colonisation. The topic is fascinating, with Young showing that in some cases the European settlers preserved concepts from their homelands, while others were adapted and changed through contact with indigenous ideas and spirits. 

Discussion of the fairies in both the nineteenth and twentieth centuries is disappointingly brief, being contained to a single chapter. This period is a very fascinating time for representations of the fairies, with Victorian Britain alone contributing a rich number of material from both the arts and science. Nonetheless, Young explores some interesting and important events in fairy history from this period such as the growing discussion of them in the developing field of folklore, and the affair and aftermath of the Cottingley fairy photos.

Young ends his book with an examination of fairies in the contemporary period. Fairies are present in many parts of modern culture. They are commercialised for children and tourists. Their existence is asserted by followers of neo-Paganism and some Christians. There are even links between fairy superstition and modern encounters with aliens and cryptids. Readers are left contemplating what the future of fairies may be, as it seems unlikely that we as a culture are prepared to leave them in the past.

Overall, Young’s book is a very thorough exploration of the history of fairies. Readers from many different areas of expertise will find something of interest in Young’s work. Furthermore, it is a useful source for scholars researching the topic of fairies. In short, the book is a worthy addition to anyone’s library.

Alex Hughes is a member of the OGOM Project and a doctoral student in Literature at the University of Hertfordshire. His PhD focuses on the various depictions of fairies in literature and popular consciousness during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.

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International Fairy Seminar 5 May 9.30-12.00 GMT

This international seminar on Fairies: ‘Reinterpretations of Celtic and
Iberian Fairies Myths & Lore’
, will take place online on 5 May, hosted by the Universidad Complutense de Madrid, 9.30-12.00 UK GMT (10.30-1.00 Madrid Time). The seminar will be hybrid: in-person and online and streaming here: 

https://meet.google.com/cnf-pbnm-itu

It will be recorded and posted on YouTube for those interested in watching it later. It’s free to attend and is aimed at students, researchers and other interested parties.

Programme: Three 30 minute talks followed by a Q & A

Title: Gothic Fairyland: A dark history of butterfly-winged fairies

Synopsis: The current innocent idea of fairyland seems as far away as possible from the shadowy realms of the dead, and yet, despite their wands and glitter, fairies have a dark history. In this talk I will be exploring how fairies came to be associated with spirits of the dead. I probe into the significance of how we lost our fear of fairies and our changing understanding of them (are they immortal or do they fade and die), and trace how they got their butterfly wings. If the winged fairy can be read as a darker manifestation of the soul, often depicted as a butterfly, we can argue more forcibly for fairies as spirits of the dead and uncover their gothic history.

Bio: Sam George is Associate Professor in Literature at the University of Hertfordshire and the co-convenor of the Open Graves, Open Minds project. Her research lies at the intersection of folklore and the gothic. Her publications include: From Modest Shoot to Forward Plant (2007); Representations of the Vampire (2012); In the Company of Wolves (2018); The Legacy of John Polidori (2024)and Gothic Enchantment with the Fairy Realm (2026), together with special issues of Gothic Studies on the Vampire, 15.1 (2013) and the werewolf, 21.1 (2019), and a Gothic Fairies issue of Gramarye, 22 (2022). Sam is currently completing a book on The Folklore of the Shadow in Nineteenth-century Gothic Fiction: Runaway Reflections, Sentient Shades and Lost Souls. She has amassed 335,050 reads for her lively press articles on vampires, werewolves, and dark fairies.

Title: Fairies: Mediations between Gender and the Environment in Lady Jane Wilde’s Celtic Myths

Synopsis: In Lady Jane Wilde’s Ancient Legends of Ireland fairies are the protectors of nature and punish those who violate natural spaces. Revisiting Celtic myths, I demonstrate that these legends underscore their contemporary relevance in addressing environmental degradation and gender inequality, showing that ancient mythological narratives offer enduring insights for ecological and social awareness in times of global crisis.

Bio: Maya Zalbidea is Assistant Professor of Literature from English Speaking Countries at Complutense University in Madrid. She is a researcher on the Andromeda Myth Criticism project. She has recently published the following articles: ‘Contemporary representations of feminine and masculine myths’ (Journal of Feminist, Gender and Women Studies, 2025); ‘Gender Studies and Intermedial Narratives’ (The International Journal of Critical Cultural Studies, 2025); ‘Ecofeminism in Rupi Kaur’s Home Body (Journal of Feminist, Gender and Women Studies, 2025); ‘We Had No Voice’: Class Inequality Through Écriture Feminine in Margaret Atwood’s The Penelopiad” (Impossibilia, 2024).

Title: Enchanted Landscapes: Fairies and Cultural Identity in Northwestern Spain

Synopsis: Fairy beliefs are commonly associated with regions such as Ireland, Scotland, and Brittany, but Northwestern Spain—particularly Galicia, Asturias, and Cantabria—also preserves a significant, though less studied, body of related folklore. These traditions reflect both broader patterns linked to so-called Celtic cosmologies and distinct local developments. A key feature of this folklore is its strong connection to the natural environment. Supernatural beings are typically associated with specific landscapes, such as rivers, caves, forests, and ancient sites. Figures like the mouras in Galicia and the xanas in Asturias illustrate how these narratives attribute symbolic meaning to the landscape and reinforce connections between human communities and their surroundings. However, the classification of these traditions as ‘Celtic’ is largely a modern construct. Since the nineteenth century, scholars have drawn parallels with other Atlantic regions, but such comparisons may oversimplify the diversity of local traditions and impose a unified identity that did not historically exist. In this talk, I will be exploring the relationship between fairies and Celtic identity, as well as their significance in Spain.

Bio: Patricia Rojo Lemos is an assistant professor of German at Rey Juan Carlos University (Madrid, Spain). She holds a PhD in Literary Studies from Complutense University of Madrid. Her research focuses on the history of the translation of female authors, as well as the relationship between literature and society. She has published in specialized journals such as Lenguaje y TextosMagazin, and Laocoonte. Her areas of expertise include intercultural communication, translation, literature, and language learning.

Attendance details:

Date and Time: Tuesday 5 May 9.30-12.00 UK GMT; 10.30-1.00 Madrid Time.

Location: Google Meet:   meet.google.com/cnf-pbnm-itu

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OGOM at the IGA 2026: AI and fairy glamour, shadows, doubles, Dorian Gray, changelings

From Bride of Frankenstein, dir. by James Whale (1935)
From Bride of Frankenstein, dir. by James Whale (1935)

We are delighted that five members of OGOM have had papers accepted for ‘Gothic Selves/Artificial Others’, the 18th Biennial Conference of the International Gothic Association, to be held at the University of Hull in July.

We’re very grateful to the IGA, who have also been very supportive of OGOM in the past, such as with funding for events like our recent Sea Changes conference, and have long-listed our recent collection on John Polidori for the Justin D. Edwards Prize for Best Edited Collection). We have many friends in the IGA and have collaborated with members and been inspired by them.

This is a great opportunity for us to present our various strands of research into the encounters of Gothic, folklore, the fantastic and enchantment that our postgraduates and more established members of the Project are pursuing. In keeping with the conference theme, you will see that we are engaging in different ways with the challenge of AI, articulating ways in which Gothic and fantastic texts, narratives of Faerie glamour and enchantment, of doubling, shadowing and replacement, might subvert the reification and dehumanisation that AI threatens. All of these papers indicate how an ethical Gothic can emerge out of this path of research.

We hope you will find, as we do, that the proposals complement each other neatly and show the coherence of OGOM as a project. We hope, too, you will come to hear our presentations and engage in dialogue with us.

We thought it might be of interest to share the abstracts for the papers each of us are presenting at the conference, so here they are:

Shabnam Ahsan, ‘Fairy glamour and deepfakes: An AI-critical reading of Flora Annie Steel’s “The Son of Seven Mothers” and “Princess Aubergine”’

Warwick Gable, 'Princess Aubergine' (1912)
Warwick Gable, ‘Princess Aubergine’ (1912)

Gothic fairy tales and folklore contain numerous references to the deception of humans by supernatural beings, through the magical alteration of their perceptions: vampires make themselves appear more attractive to their victims; fairies in English and Celtic folklore seduce humans by appearing as beautiful men and women, or offering food that seems tempting but is  rotten or poisonous in reality; and in Indian folklore, supernatural entities lure human beings into relationships by bewitching their senses and feelings. These all usually have dark consequences.

Generative AI now has the potential to wield similar power over our perception of reality, with hyper-realistic deepfakes manipulating political and other narratives, and blurring the lines between illusion and truth. While airbrushing and filters have existed for some time, the increasing seamlessness of AI-generated images coupled with voice-cloning has implications for humanity’s ability to distinguish reality from fiction, making it easier to deceive public opinion and simultaneously drive people to seek unrealistic beauty standards.

This paper draws on the ideas of Marina Warner on beauty in fairy tales, and Toni Morrison on the internalisation of colonial beauty standards, to perform an AI-critical reading of Flora Annie Steel’s retelling of the Indian fairy tales ‘The Son of Seven Mothers’ and ‘Princess Aubergine’ (1884). This paper argues that the pursuit of artificial or unnatural beauty in fairy tales directly and indirectly turns humans into a less-than-human version of themselves, ultimately leading to self-destruction and a breakdown of social relationships.

Sam George, ‘Dark sides: Runaway reflections, sentient shades, and lost souls’

George Cruikshank, 'I perceived him loosening my shadow', from Chamisso, Peter Schlemihl (1861)
George Cruikshank, ‘I perceived him loosening my shadow’, from Chamisso, Peter Schlemihl (1861)

In the twenty first century the threat of AI to our humanity is analogous to losing one’s shadow or soul. Nineteenth-century folklore warns of this detachment. J. G. Frazer records the lore of the shadow in The Golden Bough in 1890, at a time when Bram Stoker, J. M. Barrie and Oscar Wilde were writing. We learn, for example, that the villager ‘often regards his shadow or reflection as his soul, or at all events as a vital part of himself, and as such it is [. . .] a source of danger to him [. . .] if it is detached from him entirely (as he believes that it may be) he will die’.

This paper lays bare the ritualistic and magical beliefs that inform late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century shadow lore. It journeys into the shadowy worlds of Peter Schlemihl in Adelbert von Chamisso’s tale, the protagonist of Hans Andersen’s ‘The Shadow’, Dracula, and Peter Pan, who, on being detached from their shadows, have themselves become shades. Peter Schlemihl sells his shadow with terrifying consequences; Dracula the undead casts no shadow; Peter Pan loses his shadow, and most disturbing of all, Hans Andersen’s scholar is put to death, not by his enemies, but by his own shadow.

I demonstrate how this gothic motif of lost and stolen shadows uncannily mirrors the dehumanising effect of AI in the present. Will losing our shadows to AI (there is no human imprint), render us similarly displaced and in existential crisis?

Jane Gill, ‘Doubles and monstrous AI in Ernst Raupach’s “Wake Not the Dead” (1823)’

Robert Seymour, Legends of Terror! (1826)
Robert Seymour, Legends of Terror! (1826)

In Ernst Raupach’s short story ‘Wake Not the Dead (1823)’, doubling functions as a mechanism of the uncanny in Freud’s sense. This is also the case for contemporary AI avatars. Each produces anxiety not by transgressing the human form, but by repeating it too closely, transforming the double from a symbolic defence against loss into a destabilizing  figure that collapses distinctions between self and other, life and mechanism, and ethical responsibility and technological control. In Raupach’s short story, Walter, driven by grief and guilt, uses forbidden knowledge to resurrect his deceased wife, Brunhilda. Although she returns physically intact, her presence is uncanny and increasingly hostile, revealing that resurrection produces not restoration but a distorted double.

Freud’s concept of the uncanny locates horror not in radical difference but in distorted familiarity. He describes the double as an early psychic safeguard against death, re-emerging as a threat to the integrity of the self. Gothic literature repeatedly stages this transformation, most notably in narratives of artificial creation and resurrection, where imitation replaces continuity and resemblance substitutes for identity. This paper argues that Raupach’s ‘Wake Not the Dead’ dramatises the uncanny consequences of doubling through figures that replicate human presence while remaining ontologically unstable. Contemporary AI avatars intensify this dynamic by producing simulations of human behaviour that lack both consciousness and mortality, extending Freud’s theory into a technological context. Raupach’s story suggests that the uncanny arises not from the presence of the nonhuman, but from the misrecognition of repetition as life, a confusion that destabilises subjectivity and exposes the ethical limits of creation.

Rebecca Greef, ‘The profile picture of Dorian Gray: The dual nature of individual online presence and anonymity’

Ivan Albright, The Picture of Dorian Gray (1943-44)
Ivan Albright, The Picture of Dorian Gray (1943-44)

Oscar Wilde and Robert Louis Stevenson created novels that examined the duality of a person, where good and evil were at least visibly separated. Wilde’s The Picture of Dorian Gray saw the eponymous Dorian bargain his soul to remain young and beautiful forever, with the evidence of his true nature confined to a portrait. Stevenson’s The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde split human nature into two distinct people so that the publicly respectable Dr Jekyll could give in to his curiosity for debauchery and violence.

In the digital world, it is truly possible to hide away behind a picture and commit whatever atrocities you want beyond the barrier of a screen or keyboard. Moral responsibility in the online sphere can be removed from the conventions of everyday human interaction, leading some people to act maliciously knowing that they can remain anonymous and beyond retribution. From Thomas Hobbes’s Leviathan to posthumanism, the relationship between a person and their actions helps to define what it means to be human. For Hobbes, personal culpability and responsibility were important, but he saw flexibility and allowed for ‘sovereigns’ to overcome individual laws for the sake of society.

This paper will seek to explore the dual nature of the online and offline person, with reference to the boundaries of shifting societal expectations of interactions. In the world of AI and anonymity, what is permissible, and what remains unacceptable – destined to be disguised by a picture that cannot be hidden in the attic.

Bill Hughes, ‘Emancipating artefacts: Gothic enchantment and authentic consciousness in two contemporary changeling novels’

John Anster Fitzgerald, Fairies in a Bird's Nest (c. 1860)
John Anster Fitzgerald, Fairies in a Bird’s Nest (c. 1860)

Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein was conceived amidst discussions about ‘whether man was to be thought merely an instrument’, wrote John Polidori. Frankenstein is a warning, among other things, about how to treat autonomous others, and a critique of the kind of science that objectifies and extracts from both human beings and nature (of which AI is the quintessence).

In folklore, the changeling is an intrusion of otherness into human life that is uncanny and threatening. It mimics the human life it replaces, invoking Gothic horror, just as Frankenstein’s creature does. In this paper, however, I look at two contemporary changeling fictions from the perspective of Gothic as enchantment and not merely horror. ‘Enchantment’ is richly polysemic; it may mean the loss of autonomy through enthrallment to another; conversely, an enchanted world may be a utopian alternative to a world enchained by a disenchanted instrumentalism.

In Frances Hardinge’s Cuckoo Song, the changeling Not-Triss is an artefact, but she is able to transcend her artificial nature through an authentic consciousness. It is her enchanted aura that differentiates her from the thing-like and frees her to become a fully moral subject. In H. G. Parry’s A Far Better Thing, Sydney Carton, the human who is doubled, frees himself from Faerie thraldom to realise his autonomy. Yet Faerie is also a realm of enchantment, manifest in the beauty of the changeling replacements. Both protagonists escape their thing-like state through a non-deterministic intelligence, motivated by enchantment. Enchantment is both terror and wonder, enslavement and emancipation; it founds subjectivity and inspires a critique of mechanical reason.

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IGA BOOK PRIZES

We are excited to announce that OGOM’s latest book, The Legacy of John Polidori: The Romantic Vampire and Its Progeny, has been nominated for an IGA book prize. It is out in paperback in June!

Congratulations to our publisher, Manchester University Press @GothicMUP, who have six nominees on their list!

Five monographs were nominated for the Alan Lloyd Smith prize, and eight essay collections were nominated for the Justin D. Edwards prize, with many books receiving multiple nominations. The resulting longlists are as follows:

Longlist for the Allan Lloyd Smith Prize for Best Monograph 2026:

  • Dale Townshend, Matthew Gregory Lewis: The Gothic and Romantic Literary Culture (University of Wales Press, 2024)
  • Emma McEvoy, The Music of the Gothic, 1789-1820 (Cambridge University Press, 2024)
  • Rebecca Wynne-Walsh, New Basque Gothic (Manchester University Press, 2025)
  • David Ashford, A Book of Monsters: Promethean Horror in Modern Literature and Culture (Manchester University Press, 2024)
  • Joana Jacob Ramalho, Memory and the Gothic Aesthetic in Film (Palgrave Macmillan, 2025)

Longlist for the Justin D. Edwards Prize for Best Edited Collection 2026

  • Nick Groom and William Hughes, eds., The Vampire: An Edinburgh Companion (Edinburgh University Press, 2025)
  • Andrew Smith, ed., The Victorian Ghost Story: An Edinburgh Companion (Edinburgh University Press, 2025)
  • Robert Edgar, Lauren Stephenson and John Marland, eds., Horrifying Children: Hauntology and the Legacy of Children’s Television (Bloomsbury, 2024)
  • John Whatley, ed., The Gothic in Times of Crisis (Manchester University Press, 2025)
  • Carol Davidson, ed., Gothic Dreams and Nightmares (Manchester University Press, 2024)
  • Barbara Chamberlin, Julia Round, and Kom Kunyosying, eds., Horror and Comics (University of Wales Press, 2025)
  • Sam George and Bill Hughes, eds., The Legacy of John Polidori: The Romantic Vampire and its Progeny (Manchester University Press, 2024)
  • Ruth Heholt and Jo Parsons, eds., Ghosts and the Gothic (Manchester University Press, 2025)

All nominations will be assessed by a panel of past winners and presidents of the IGA. The Chair for the prize panels is Joseph Crawford. The Secretary for the prize is Alexia Ainsworth. A shortlist will be published on the IGA website by the middle of July. The prizes will be presented (or, if a winning author is not present, announced) during the conference which, this year, is hosted at the University of Hull, July 28-31 2026.

Congratulations to all nominees and especially to all our wonderful contributors!

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Jürgen Habermas (1929–2026): Dialogue, rationality and humanity

The Bluestockings. Richard Samulel, Portraits in the Characters of the Muses in the Temple of Apollo (1778)
The Bluestockings. Richard Samulel, Portraits in the Characters of the Muses in the Temple of Apollo (1778); National Portrait Gallery, London

Human beings are ineluctably social, and every action they perform that is social, including the transformation of nature so they can live, is coordinated through language. Our lives rest upon our faculty for dialogue, for reaching agreement on what is true, and a fundamental assumption that we are speaking to one another in good faith.

Habermas with students at the University of Frankfurt in 1969
Habermas with students at the University of Frankfurt in 1969

This is really what lies at the core of the philosophy of Jürgen Habermas, who has just died at the age of 96. Habermas before his death was, I think, the greatest living philosopher and one of the most important thinkers from the second half of the twentieth-century until now. He was certainly one of the most erudite, drawing on a deep acquaintance with continental philosophy (particularly the Frankfurt School, of which he is considered the second generation), but also forging links with the analytical tradition of the Anglophone world. He was particularly indebted to the speech-act theory of Austin and Searle. His interests ranged from sociology through psychology, anthropology, linguistic, jurisprudence, and religion.

Some of his earliest writing was inspired by the horror of Nazism and the refusal of some Germans to adequately acknowledge it. He mounted a fierce attack on Heidegger’s complicity with the Nazis and on German right-wing historians who minimised the uniqueness of the Holocaust. But it is The Structural Transformation of the Public Sphere (1962) that he is probably best known for to English speakers, an account of how the growth of literary criticism in the eighteenth century is connected to the formation of a space of debate and critique in opposition to the State. This space, the public sphere, would degenerate as mass media became commodified. He has been much misunderstood here; the public sphere was more a regulative ideal that was never fully realised, and Habermas was aware that it excluded the working class, women, and minority groups.

His later work generalises that ideal as a universal and essential foundation of human society, which of necessity presupposes a communicative rationality. There is an ‘ideal speech situation’ of informed, uncoerced, and unconstrained dialogue. But this can be subject to various kinds of distortions, from unconscious and systematic self-deception to deliberate, strategic manipulation. In the magnum opus that is the culmination of a series of books that develop this theme, The Theory of Communicative Action (1981) he shows how what he calls (drawing on phenomenology) the ‘lifeworld’, our everyday lived experience, can become ‘colonised’ by autonomous systems of power and money.

David Hume, Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion, 2nd edn (1779)
David Hume, Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion, 2nd edn (1779)

My doctoral thesis was on the eighteenth-century dialogue (as a literary genre in the manner of Plato), a genre that flourished in that period. I was trying (not as successfully as I would like) to show how the formation of the English novel at that time was modulated by the dialogue form and often incorporated it, and how these dialogues themselves were novelised in ways that enriched them as literary artefacts. I relied on Habermas’s notion of communicative reason considerably, so I do feel a personal sense of loss.[1]

However, I do think there are flaws in Habermas’s thought. I find unsatisfying his shift away from Marxism and the incorporation of systems theory, and the subsequent political stances that this led to. The aesthetic dimension is very undeveloped and the poetic, polysemous aspect of language neglected in favour of the purely communicational. I was hugely disappointed by his recent public intervention on Palestine (I think there are complex reasons for this, both personal and cultural, and one Iraqi scholar has pointed out how completely at odds these remarks are with Habermas’s own universalist philosophy).

Thomas Rowlandson, Breaking up of the Bluestocking Club (1815)
Thomas Rowlandson, Breaking up of the Bluestocking Club (1815)

Yet Habermas’s central thesis is of crucial importance, especially in an era where the very idea of truth is under attack, where rational debate seems impossible and where it is demonstrably blocked and distorted by the corporate ownership of channels of communication. Where, too, many people as well as being deliberately and systematically manipulated seem sunk in astonishing depths of self-deception.

In an age of growing unreason, Habermas’s defence of the Enlightenment as ‘an unfinished project’ preserves some of the radicalism of the Frankfurt School and their conviction that, despite the narrowing of reason to the purely instrumental, only reason can unfold the human capacity to create a better world. His humanist stance and meticulous arguments against anti-humanist strands of contemporary thinking when billionaire posthumanists seize hold of information and communication and neoliberalism aims to reify and dehumanise everything, is inspiring.

In a time of polarisation and the intensified atomisation that social media fosters, and amidst debates about free speech, Habermas’s regulative ‘ideal speech situation’ reminds us of our authentic dialogic capacity. The core argument that consciousness is social, linguistic, and intersubjective is a crucial counterpoint to the rise of AI; Habermas constantly reminds us what it is to be truly human.

And how, you may ask, does Habermas fit in with the OGOM Project? His focus on the systematic distortion of communication between people may cast light on how Gothic texts dramatise manipulative villainy and extreme dislocations of rationality. His discourse ethics, which places much emphasis on the recognition of the Other, can help theorise the notion of an ethical Gothic that we are pursuing. Gothic literature has had an ambivalent relationship with the Enlightenment since its inception, and Habermas was one of that project’s most ardent and subtle defenders, so his thinking can illuminate that relationship more acutely. But perhaps it is in the gaps in Habermas’s thought, gaps that the very rigour of his thought reveal, that we turn to in order to see ways of re-enchantment that resist the instrumental reason of disenchantment that Habermas, following Weber, analysed so meticulously. And by turning to other thinkers in dialogue with Habermas (such as his mentor Adorno and Paul Ricoeur), we hope to sketch a way of reading that discloses how Gothic and fantastic modes conjure up an unsettling glamour that ignites an emancipatory ethics.


[1] My essay on Jane Austen’s Sense and Sensibility, ‘Jane Austen’s Conversational Pragmatics: Rational Evaluation and Strategic Action in Sense and Sensibility is an example of my approach if anyone is interested. I wanted to revisit this critically for a conference on Austen at 250 years, for I now think there is more of a dialectical underside to Austen’s Enlightenment rationalism than I recognised; my missing this corresponds to a gap in Habermas’s aesthetics, I think. (Ill health prevented me from presenting the paper, sadly.)

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Literature Research Seminar 20 May 1.30-2.30

The UH Literature Research Seminar series is back after a short hiatus. We have changed the format slightly, so we have a mixture of current research papers and invited speakers and we’ve transitioned to Microsoft Teams as the University of Hertfordshire no longer supports Zoom. The slot has remained the same, once a month on Wednesdays, 1.30-2.30. These talks are open to all and are free to attend. The speaker normally presents for around 30-40 mins and then takes questions from attendees (either in the chat or live to camera). Its a friendly and supportive forum that is inclusive of ECRS and Research Students. Join me for one of these new sessions on Wednesday 20 May at 1.30 on Teams. I look forward to any questions or comments.

Speaker: Sam George, Associate Professor of Research, University of Hertfordshire  

Title: ‘The Luck of the Ningyo: Japanese human-fish Yokai and the rise of the fake museum mermaid’ 

Abstract: This paper will explore the representation of the Ningyo or Japanese human fish Yokai; a creature of genderless hybridity that functions as both a prophecy beast and a Mer Monster. I will chart its fascinating history, from the earliest sightings in folk tales and chronicles of Japan, to its manifestation in new media in the present.  I argue that Ningyo were made monstrous through Japan’s interactions with the West when mummified or dried specimens were sold to Europeans for show in the nineteenth century. Descriptions of these mummified or desiccated mermaid creations are decidedly gothic and bring the Ningyo within the realms of the weird and the eerie. In Japan, however, they are sacred objects, inviting good fortune and acting as amulets in Buddhist or Shinto shrines, where they have lain preserved for centuries.

Microsoft Teams Event 20 May, 1.30-2.30. BST.

Join: https://teams.microsoft.com/meet/3848941421568?p=SEZ3GWstBsnqdIMFrn

Meeting ID: 384 894 142 156 8

Passcode: LA6q5DH9

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