Whilst folk horror, hauntological and ‘wyrd’ media are still developing as categories, the British landscape is invariably noted as a key factor in creating eerie atmospheres on-screen, particularly in 1970s British film and television. This chapter examines to what extent the use of landscape and themes of unearthing help to characterise relevant film and television as British, from the ghost stories of MR James and their on-screen adaptations through to contemporary folk horror films such as Ben Wheatley’s (2013) A Field in England. The hauntological presence of such British landscapes and the undercurrent of 1970s media can be seen running throughout twenty-first-century television series such as Reece Shearsmith and Steve Pemberton’s In...
“A place retaining a trace of historical and cultural happening... can then allow for the slippages ...
Thomas Hardy and the Folk Horror Tradition takes the uncanny and unsettling fiction of Thomas Hardy ...
The last few years have seen an increased interest in everything remotely connected to folk horror. ...
Acknowledging folklore as central to folk horror and how it is perpetuated through mass media is som...
Current creatives across a variety of British media are taking inspiration for their work from, and ...
While ‘folk horror’ might be thought of as an adult genre, a startling amount of 1970s children’s te...
Television schedules in 1970s Britain were so full of with stories involving folkloric narratives fe...
Outlining key elements of folk horror, this article discusses the influence of British 1970s televis...
Prominent purveyors of British millennial film and television folk-horror are doing so with distinct...
The Routledge Companion to Folk Horror offers a comprehensive guide to this popular genre. It explor...
‘Folk horror’ is gaining academic attention, and is beginning to be applied as a generic term to med...
Invited research presentation given at the University of Reading, 8 October 2015
In this chapter I argue two separate (but related) things. Firstly, focusing primarily on the cult f...
The Folk Horror subgenre, focused on tensions traditional and modern ways and haunted by folk tales ...
SINCE AT LEAST 2010, critics have been working to define folk horror, understand its appeal, and est...
“A place retaining a trace of historical and cultural happening... can then allow for the slippages ...
Thomas Hardy and the Folk Horror Tradition takes the uncanny and unsettling fiction of Thomas Hardy ...
The last few years have seen an increased interest in everything remotely connected to folk horror. ...
Acknowledging folklore as central to folk horror and how it is perpetuated through mass media is som...
Current creatives across a variety of British media are taking inspiration for their work from, and ...
While ‘folk horror’ might be thought of as an adult genre, a startling amount of 1970s children’s te...
Television schedules in 1970s Britain were so full of with stories involving folkloric narratives fe...
Outlining key elements of folk horror, this article discusses the influence of British 1970s televis...
Prominent purveyors of British millennial film and television folk-horror are doing so with distinct...
The Routledge Companion to Folk Horror offers a comprehensive guide to this popular genre. It explor...
‘Folk horror’ is gaining academic attention, and is beginning to be applied as a generic term to med...
Invited research presentation given at the University of Reading, 8 October 2015
In this chapter I argue two separate (but related) things. Firstly, focusing primarily on the cult f...
The Folk Horror subgenre, focused on tensions traditional and modern ways and haunted by folk tales ...
SINCE AT LEAST 2010, critics have been working to define folk horror, understand its appeal, and est...
“A place retaining a trace of historical and cultural happening... can then allow for the slippages ...
Thomas Hardy and the Folk Horror Tradition takes the uncanny and unsettling fiction of Thomas Hardy ...
The last few years have seen an increased interest in everything remotely connected to folk horror. ...