‘Ill met by moonlight’
Gothic encounters with enchantment and the
Faerie realm in literature and culture
8‒10 April 2021
The Open Graves, Open Minds (OGOM) Project was launched in 2010 with the
Vampires and the Undead in Modern Culture conference. We have subsequently hosted
symposia on Bram Stoker and John William Polidori, unearthing depictions of the
vampire in literature, art, and other media, before embracing shapeshifting
creatures and other supernatural beings and their worlds. The Company of
Wolves, our ground-breaking werewolf and feral humans conference, took place in
2015. This was followed by The Urban Weird, a folkloric collaboration with
Supernatural Cities in 2017. The OGOM Project now extends to all narratives of
the fantastic, the folkloric, the fabulous, and the magical.
Our research from these conferences and symposia has since been
disseminated in various publications. We have produced two edited collections
of essays: Open Graves, Open Minds: Representations of Vampires and the Undead
from the Enlightenment to the Present Day (Manchester University Press, 2013)
and In the Company of Wolves: Werewolves, Wolves, and Wild Children, ed. by Sam
George and Bill Hughes (Manchester University Press, 2020) and two special
issues of Gothic Studies: Vampires and the Undead in Modern Culture special
issue, 15.1 (May 2013) and Werewolves and Wildness special issue, 21.1 (Spring
2019).
To celebrate the tenth anniversary of OGOM, we turn our attention to
fairies and other creatures from the realm of Faerie.
Keynote Speakers
Prof. Diane Purkiss (Keble College, Oxford), ‘Where Do Fairies Come
From? Shifts in Shape’
Prof. Dale Townshend (Manchester Metropolitan University), ‘“The fairy
kind of writing”: Gothic and the
Aesthetics of Enchantment in the Long Eighteenth Century’
Prof. Catherine Spooner (Lancaster University), ‘Glamourie: Fairies and
Fashion’
Prof. Owen Davies (University of Hertfordshire), ‘Print Grimoires,
Spirit Conjuration, and the Democratisation of Learned Magic’
Dr Sam George (University of Hertfordshire), ‘Fairy Lepidoptera: the
Dark History of Butterfly-Winged Fae’
The conference will also feature A Fairy Workshop on networking and
outreach in the field of folklore studies for postgraduate students and ECRS
with Dr Ceri Houlbrook (University of Hertfordshire; Magical Folk, 2018) and a
mini Fairy Film Festival in St Albans. And, to complete the anniversary
celebrations, there will be A Fairy Ball where delegates will be encouraged to
abandon their human natures and transform into their dark fey Other.
There will be an opportunity to submit your paper for our OGOM
publications.
As Prof. Dale Townsend has observed, the concept of the Gothic has had
an association with fairies from its inception; even before Walpole’s 1764
Castle of Otranto (considered the first Gothic novel), eighteenth-century
poetics talked of ‘the fairy kind of writing’ which, for Addison, ‘raise a
pleasing kind of Horrour in the Mind of the Reader’ and ‘and favour those
secret Terrours and Apprehensions to which the Mind of Man is naturally
subject’. Johnson, in his Preface to Shakespeare (1765), talks of ‘the loves of
Theseus and Hippolyta combined with the Gothic mythology of fairies’. ‘Horror’
and ‘terror’ are key terms of affect in Gothic criticism; Townsend urges us,
however, to move away from this dichotomy. While we are certainly interested in
the darker aspects of fairies and the fear they may induce, this conference
also welcomes attention to that aspect of Gothic that invokes wonder and
enchantment.
Fairies in folklore, unlike the prettified creatures we are familiar
with, are always rather dangerous. Old ballads such as ‘Tam Lyn’ and ‘The Demon
Lover’ reveal their unsettling side. The darker aspects of fairies and their
kin may be glimpsed in the early modern work of Michael Drayton, Edmund
Spenser, Robert Herrick, and, of course, Shakespeare. They have found their way
into the Romanticism of Keats and Shelley, modulated by the Gothic. Fairies
blossomed in the art and literature of the Victorians; though it is here
perhaps that they are most sentimentalised, there is also much darkness. The
paintings of Richard Dadd and John Anster Fitzgerald are tinged with Gothic as
are classic works of fairy literature such as Christina Rossetti’s Goblin
Market and J. M. Barrie’s Peter Pan. The nineteenth century also saw a surge in
the dramatisation of fairies with the féerie (or ‘fairy play’), which set the
scene for fairy ballets such as Les Sylphides as well as cinematic productions.
Following the rise of the vampire lover in contemporary paranormal romance,
dark fairies (alongside pixies, trolls, and similar creatures from the world of
Faerie) have also been found in the arms and beds of humans. The original
menace of traditional Faerie has been restored in the form of ambivalently
sinister love objects. This has emerged from precursors such as Hope Mirrlees’s
Lud-in-the-Mist (1926), Sylvia Townsend Warner’s Kingdoms of Elfin tales from
the 1970s and the pioneering urban fantasy of Emma Bull’s War for the Oaks
(1987), to more recent works like Neil Gaiman’s Stardust (1997) and Elizabeth
Hand’s Mortal Love (2004). Young Adult writers such as Holly Black, Maggie Stiefvater,
Julie Kagawa, Melissa Marr have all written fairy romances with more than a
tinge of Gothic darkness and there are excellent adult paranormal fairy
romances such as Jeanette Ng’s Under the Pendulum Sun (2017). Gothic Faery has
manifested in other media: Gaiman’s Stardust has been filmed; cinematic
interpretations of the phenomenon of the Cottingley Fairies have been made
(with Photographing Fairies giving it a Gothic twist), and, recently, the dark
fairies of Carnival Row have appeared on TV.
Max Weber and, subsequently, the Frankfurt School discerned a state of
disenchantment in modernity, whereby industrialisation and instrumental
rationality had erased the sense of the sacred in life with ambiguous effects.
The appeal of fairy narratives in the modern era may be their power to
re-enchant our desacralised world. Fairy narratives in the alienated world of
modernity often represent untamed nature and lead us to explore environmental
concerns. The Land of Faerie, Tir na Nog, the Otherworld can be a setting for
Utopia. These tales may also uncover the repressed desires of inner nature,
emancipatory yearnings, the spirit of revolution, creative inspiration, pure
chaos, or Otherness in general. Yet often this is ambivalent; the Gothic
darkness of enchantment may evoke a hesitancy over surrendering to nature or
the irrational as well as having a restorative allure.
Topics may include but are not restricted to:
- ‘The fairy kind of writing’ in 18C Gothic poetics
- The Gothic fairy in Romanticism; Victorian fairies in art and literature
- Dark fairies in paranormal romance
- Fairies in YA literature
- Fairies and urban fantasy
- Fairies in ballads and medieval romance
- Fairies on stage
- Fairies in music
- Faery, disenchantment, and modernity
- Fairy folklore
- Fairies, nature, and eco-Gothic
- Cinematic fairies and the Gothic; Fairies and place
- Utopia and the Otherworld
- Gothic folklore; Goblins, hobs, and other malevolent fairy folk
- Intertextuality and fairy narratives
- Fairies and theology
- Fairies and (pseudo)science
- Light and shade: fairies, film, and optics
- Fairy morality
- The Faerie world and the aesthetic dimension
- Fairy festivals and the carnivalesque
- Changelings and identity
- Fairies and the Other
- Fairies and fashion
- Fairies and nationalism
- Fairy-vampires and other hybrids
- Steampunk Fairies
Abstracts (200-300 words) for twenty-minute papers or proposals for
panels, together with a short biography (150 words), should be submitted by 30
October 2020 as an email attachment in MS Word document format to all of the
following:
- Dr Sam George, s.george@herts.ac.uk
- Dr Bill Hughes, bill.enlightenment@gmail.com
- Dr Kaja Franck, k.a.franck@gmail.com
- Daisy Butcher, daisy2205@yahoo.co.uk
Please use your surname as the document title. The abstract should be in
the following format: (1) Title (2) Presenter(s) (3) Institutional affiliation
(4) Email (5) Abstract.
Panel proposals should include (1) Title of the panel (2) Name and
contact information of the chair (3) Abstracts of the presenters.
Presenters will be notified of acceptance by 30 November 2020.
Visit us at Open Graves Open Minds and follow us on Twitter
@OGOMProject #GothicFairies
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