‘Folklore’? What do you Mean? And Why?

Laying a wreath at the grave of William John Thoms © Paul Cowdell

You’re obviously already interested enough to know what folklore is, right? Yet the more we look at folklore, the less confident we can be about straightforward certainties.

All Hael! All Hael! Singing with the Kibbo Kift

What sort of music did a 1920s utopian youth movement fiercely opposed to mainstream society actually like? The Kindred of the Kibbo Kift (‘KK’) were creatures of their time.

Sardinian Folklore: Gino Bottiglioni’s Tales of Giants and Fairies, Elves and Plagues

Mural in Sardinia https://pixabay.com/en/sardinia-murales-murals-art-223377/

have a confession to make: I’m a bibliophile. I have a small collection of very, very old books and still count the moment I touched a middle ages herbal worth more than my apartment as a highlight of my life. I mean, this surely doesn’t come as a shock here on #FolkloreThursday, albeit it does […]

Folk Healing & Hypnotism: Arthur Spray, ‘The Mysterious Cobbler’ of Bexhill

Photo showing Jim Cornford & Arthur Spray in the doorway of their cobblers' shop, Cornford & Spray, 16 Station Road, Bexhill © Bexhill Museum Arthur Spray Archive

Arthur Spray, known as ‘The Mysterious Cobbler of Bexhill’, wrote an autobiography in 1935 which detailed his famed powers in healing and hypnotism.

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