Roses are Red: The Sinister Side of Valentine’s Day Folklore

Lupercalia by Andrea Camassei, c. 1635 [Public domain] https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Camasei-lupercales-prado.jpg#/media/File:Camasei-lupercales-prado.jpg

Sending mean cards? Eating mashed earthworms? Using jack o’lanterns to light medieval love banquets? They’re all surprising yet vaguely sinister ways to celebrate Valentine’s Day.

Snow Queens and Winter Witches from Around the World

Elena Ringo's Illustration of the Snow Queen by H.C. Andersen, CC BY 3.0, http://www.elena-ringo.com, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=37744268

Through myth, fairy tale and legend, powerful women are depicted as dark, cruel and calculating, and they are often naturally associated with winter – a season where all warmth withdraws, and the land is covered with snow and ice, and life is no more than a battle of survival against the elements.

Madagascar Superstitions & Taboos: Fighting the Aye-Aye Fady

Ako is the name of an aye-aye in the children’s book written to combat harmful folklore in Madagascar. Illustration by Deborah Ross on book cover of “Ako the Aye-Aye”.

In some regions of Madagascar, it is considered fady to eat certain lemurs, meaning local taboos can actually act as a shield to protect specific species. However, aye-ayes appear to be the only lemur associated with fady leading to their persecution. How did the aye-aye end up drawing the short straw when it comes to local folklore?

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