Spring-heeled Jack: The Terror of Victorian England

Drawing of Spring Heeled Jack https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Spring_Heeled_Jack#/media/File:Spring_Heeled_Jack-penny_dreadful.png

In 1838, the year Queen Victoria came to the throne, London was bedevilled by a clawed, fire-breathing, shape-shifting demon popularly known as Spring-heeled Jack. A rather haphazard creation of local gossip, newspaper reports, and penny dreadful fiction, this urban legend, once largely forgotten, is now being revived through a contemporary interest in steampunk and reimagined […]

Trows, Changelings and Wise Women in Early Nineteenth Century Kirkwall

Photograph of the standing stones of Stennes in Orkney, with a sheep eating grass.

A nineteenth century autobiography written by the minister William Leask offers a fascinating insight into supernatural belief in contemporary Orkney.

‘May I have some water?’ The Fair-Haired Lady from the Toilet

Photo by Erik Müller on Unsplash https://unsplash.com/photos/zrfD9aVUVsU

Folklore changes and evolves with the peoples and their societies. It’s not rigid, it’s not concrete. As time passes, new characters emerge and others get their stories and features improved. Some may also disappear. This character (or monster!) I talk about in this post is quite modern – and scares many people, just by being so. Let’s meet A Loira do Banheiro (The Fair-haired Lady from the Toilet).

Racism & Folklore: Meet Saci-Pererê, The Brazilian Folklore Superstar

By ASCOM Prefeitura de Votuporanga - Saciata, CC BY 2.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=45267148

We’ve got many different characters in Brazilian Folkcloric scene and they are related to all aspects of the land, weather, traditions and beliefs. Due to the territorial size of Brazil, some characters and legends are exclusive in some areas, while others change in order to adapt to different locations. However, there is one single name which is known all over the country and that fascinates – and sometimes scares – everyone, from children to adults. He is Saci-Pererê, the Brazilian folklore superstar.

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