The Indigenous Burial Ground: Urban Legends and Popular Culture

forest

In North America, legends of haunted places often claim they have been built on an “Indian burial ground.” Indigenous burial ground urban legends are so widely shared they’ve become a part of popular culture. Writers used them repeatedly as a literary device in horror until they became a comedic cliché and eventually a meme.

Farming in British Folk Tales: Respect or Revenge?

Meadow in sunshine

Modern farming has transformed the landscape of Britain and Ireland, to the detriment of nature. Lisa Schneidau argues that the old folk tales of the land are more relevant to us than ever.

Diving for stories – Wild Waves & Wishing Wells

This is the cover image from ‘Wild Waves and Wishing Wells by Gala Tomasso. All rights granted. https://www.thehistorypress.co.uk/publication/wild-waves-and-wishing-wells/9780750990486/

If the body of Ireland is The Emerald Isle, then surely it follows that her veins are made of sapphire? The (true) story goes: that there is nowhere in Ireland that is further than sixty(ish) miles from the sea, and inland there are forty five thousand(ish) miles of waterways and a good pouring of lakes and ponds, then it’s no surprise that water appears central to many of our myths and stories.

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