Happy New Year from OGOM to you all!! Sorry for the scarcity of posts but illness and workloads have taken their toll. But there are some exciting events for 2025 already in the world of the Gothic and fantastic, the folkloric and fabulous.
We’d also just like to remind you all about the OGOM publication, The Legacy of John Polidori: The Romantic vampire and its progeny, ed. by Sam George and Bill Hughes (Manchester University Press, 2024). I blogged about it here for MUP, where I talk about how special Polidori was in the rise of vampire fiction and the importance of his legacy.
Projects
Ann Radcliffe, Then and Now
This is an incredibly exciting new project involving the publication of the eight-volume The Cambridge Edition of the Works of Ann Radcliffe, edited by Michael Gamer and Angela Wright and an impressive editorial team; plus a conference, reading groups, and public lectures. I, for one, am thrilled, and looking forward to the conference!
Ann Radcliffe, Then and Now is a three-year AHRC-funded project that seeks to re-establish Ann Radcliffe (1764–1823) as a major figure in British literature of the late-eighteenth and early-nineteenth centuries, as well as to commemorate her as a pioneering writer whose influence is still of considerable cultural significance today.
The Irish Network for Gothic and Horror Studies
This relaunch on 22 February 2025 at Trinity College, Dublin is another exciting project, invaluable especially for postgraduates and ECRs based in Ireland.
We are holding an in-person networking event on Saturday 22 February 2025, in the Long Room Hub, Trinity College Dublin. During this event, we will be re-launching the Irish Network for Gothic and Horror Studies (INGHS). The Network will be affiliated with the Irish Journal of Gothic and Horror Studies.
This event will establish the network as an informal vehicle for promoting the work of Gothic and horror scholars (whether they be affiliated or independent) and creative practitioners from throughout the island of Ireland.
Calls for papers (conferences)
CFP: Sea changes: The fairytale Gothic of mermaids, selkies, and enchanted hybrids of ocean and river
The British Library, London, UK, and online; 5–6 September 2025
Deadline: 7 February 2025
We’d first just like to remind you of OGOM’s next fabulous conference – the deadline for submissions is not that far away!
Mermaids, selkies, and other such hybrid aquatic creatures, especially their global equivalents, facilitate the interaction between humanity and nature (both inner and outer). In their Gothic aspect and engagement with darkness, they may adumbrate a re-enchantment of the disenchanted world (following Weber and Adorno); reconciliation with Otherness; and new relationships with the natural world. We are looking for presentations that look at narratives of merfolk and their kin in the light of their Gothic aspects and that highlight their connection with folklore, dwelling on the enchantment of their strange fluidity. We invite contributors to create a dialogue amidst these sea changes into something rich and strange.
CFP: Folklore and the Senses: Call for Papers
University College Cork, Ireland, and on line (hybrid); 20–22 June 2025
Deadline: 31 January 2025
This looks a brilliant conference and the deadline is approaching fast!
How does folklore treat the instruments through which we sense—our eyes, ears, nose, skin, fingers, mouth, tongue…? What do tastes, smells and other sensory experiences mean in tradition? What happens when we are deprived of our senses, voluntarily or involuntarily? And what does folklore tell us when our senses stop making sense—experiences of things heard but not seen, seen but not heard? When must we, traditionally, refute the evidence of our senses? And of course what we ‘feel’ can be felt in more ways than one, through the heart for instance. Folklore is communication, but there are many ways to communicate: the kiss, the grip, the sign, the gesture… Can we talk about visual folklore, olfactory folklore, the touch or savour of folklore?
CFP: Gothic Crossroads
Manchester Metropolitan University, 25–27 June 2025
Deadline: 28 February 2025
Physical crossroads have long been sites where the human, divine and demonic were felt to converge and potent sites for magical, religious encounters, rituals of transformation, binding of undesirable spirits, siting of gallows and links to ancient cosmology. This conference also considers the crossroads as a space where the boundaries between differing spheres are negotiable, asking what it means to walk in the interdisciplinary pathways and cross currents of the Gothic.
CFP: Vernon Lee and the European cultural heritage: Reciprocal influences and intermedial dialogue (International Conference)
LARCA (Université Paris Cité), CELIS (Université Clermont Auvergne); in collaboration with the International Vernon Lee Society
Bâtiment Olympe de Gouges, 8 Place Paul-Ricoeur, Paris; 18–19 September 2025
Deadline: 1 March 2025
The work of Vernon Lee (1856-1935), a cosmopolitan British author and essayist who was precociously European-minded, covers a vast field, from neo-Gothic fiction to travel writing, aesthetic theory, theater and political essays. This work establishes a particular dialogue with past and contemporary literary traditions, whether it be fantasy literature (Hauntings, 1890) or authors of the decadent movement such as Oscar Wilde, or even French authors (notably Théophile Gautier, with whom she shares an interest in the art of Antiquity).
But beyond this intertextual dimension, the reader is struck by the essential part played in her production by the discourse on art as a whole [. . .] to such an extent that some short stories are constructed in direct reference to specific paintings or musical pieces, [. . .]
We may therefore wonder to what extent the place given to other arts in Lee’s writings [. . .] results in the construction of truly intermedial aesthetics, which blends literary narrative devices with a broader aesthetics (pictorial and musical) that is evoked and implemented in the texts.
CFP: Haunted Modernities, Present Pasts and Spectral Futures
Hosted by Falmouth University, and co-sponsored by Northeastern University
Falmouth University, UK; Wed 16th-Sat 19th July 2025
Deadline: 17 March 2025
This conference explores haunted modernities and spectral futures of all sorts. Looking back to the past as a haunted space and forward to the ‘spectres’ of the future, we want ‘Haunted Modernities’ to be indicative of wide open spaces and fruitful intersections in scholarship and practice. Whether work is hyper-local, global, or interstellar we welcome imaginative, creative, ethical, and diverse discussions from all disciplines and subject areas. As well as traditional papers, creative practice work is also invited in whatever form – written, film, audio, performance, exhibitions etc.
CFP: A Warning to The Curious: Ghostly, Supernatural and Weird Tales
Romancing the Gothic
On line; 23-24 August 2025
Deadline: 10 April 2025
In 1925, M R James published his final collection of ghostly tales: A Warning to the Curious and Other Ghost Stories. Often thought of as a writer of ‘ghost stories’, James’ works span a range of supernatural manifestations and generically sit on the cusp of the ghostly and weird. James’ name has become almost synonymous with the ghostly tale and many of his works have been adapted. This conference seeks to explore not only James’ work but also its legacy and it aims to put James’ work within the wider context of ghostly, supernatural and weird writing on both a national and international level. We therefore welcome papers on writers and artists from any historical period and any country.
CFP: Unquiet Shores: Coastal Acoustics and the Terpsichorean Ocean
Edinburgh Napier University, Scotland, and on line; 18–20 June 2025
Deadline: 10 February 2025
The coast is a region readily identified by its distinctive soundscapes. This conference – co-run by the Haunted Shores and Macabre Danse networks – invites contributions that attend to the wealth of gothic, weird, and uncanny media that explore and exploit the haunting potential of the coast’s unquiet atmospheres. [. . .] We welcome papers, panels, or workshops on anything relating to sound or hearing on the shore, in coastal waters, or inland coastal regions, from any time period, form, media, genre, or theoretical approach – including, but not limited to, the sonic gothic, coastal studies, adaptation, the blue humanities, ballet gothic, and more.
Events
Manchester Folk Horror VII
The Peer hat, Faraday Street, Manchester, UK; 1 February 2025
Music, poetry, and talks exploring the theme of the Holy Grail. This looks an exciting all-day event!
We live in dark times, facing down existential destruction from a bewildering array of angles. What solution is there to be found, short of accepting our fate and rejoicing into the dark, until the last fire has burnt out?
Perhaps none. But what if the horror came not from the last dance, but from the possibility that there might be a greater call to a heavy responsibility? What if merely sitting back and watching as the world falls into night, is not our destiny? What if we are called to set out into that night in search of…something; in search of something unknowable and unprovable?
This edition of the Manchester Folk Horror explores this idea. It is not a call to activism. It is a call to head forth into the utter unknown, with nothing so much as one’s soul at stake.
Victorian Psycho: Virginia Feito in conversation with Xavier Aldana Reyes
Blackwell’s Bookshop, 146 Oxford Road, Manchester, UK; 6:30–8 pm, 19 February 2025
We can’t wait to welcome Virginia Feito to the shop to discussion her gruesomely brilliant new novel VICTORIAN PSYCHO, which probes the psyche of a bloodthirsty governess in Victorian England. Virginia will be in conversation with Xavier Aldana Reyes, a founder of the Manchester Centre for Gothic Studies.
Elias Ashmole and the Cottingley Fairies: from ‘An Excellent Way To Gett A Fayrie’ to Princess Mary’s Gift Book
John Clark, The Folklore Society, online talk; 19:00–20:30, 18 March 2025
The three butterfly-winged ‘dancing fairies’ in the first photograph taken by Elsie Wright and Frances Griffiths at Cottingley Beck in July 1917 were cut-outs based upon a drawing of fairies that had appeared in a book called Princess Mary’s Gift Book (1915). The drawing, by Claude Shepperson, was an illustration for a poem by distinguished poet Alfred Noyes ‘A spell for a fairy’.
Surprisingly, a mishmash of magic rituals Noyes describes, to summon fairies and make them visible, can be traced back to original spells in one of the ‘magical’ manuscripts of Elias Ashmole (1617–1692) in the Bodleian Library. Yet central to Noyes’s poem are concerns that are very much of his own time.
The immediate inspiration of Shepperson’s image of dancing fairies is also unexpected, lying not in contemporary ‘fairy’ depictions like those by Arthur Rackham, but apparently in another art form entirely.
And we also look at the career of the art-historian/occultist Fred Gettings who in the 1970s was the first to recognise the source of the Cottingley Fairies in Shepperson’s drawing.