A Feast of Folk: TradFest Edinburgh

May Day Parade, Edinburgh 2016 © 2016 Mike Andrews

The first of two annual festivals run by TRACS (Traditional Arts and Culture Scotland), TradFest Edinburgh • Dùn Èideann is a celebration not only of Scotland’s traditions and heritage, but equally of the ways in which artists and performers continue to reconfigure them for 21st century audiences in innovative and exciting ways.

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.

Exploring Folktales: Achieving Improved Ego Identity and Recovery from Trauma

Four seasons, anthropomorphized as women by Alfonse Mucha

This piece will present and focus on the benefits of two specific psychotherapeutic tools — archetypal genograms and mythological based art — via which mythology as spirituality can be used as an outlet to help the healing process of people with abuse and other trauma related emotional difficulties.

Will the Real Father Christmas Please Stand Up?

Saturnalia by Antoine Callet. CC0 https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=32008455

From midwinter feasting at Neolithic British sites like Durrington Walls, to the Haloa of Ancient Greece and the Norse Yule celebration, humans have always needed a reminder during the depths of winter of light, community and the promise of good things to come.

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