In this ground-breaking book, two leading experts provide the definitive survey of British folklore past and present.
Across thirteen themed chapters, Owen Davies and Ceri Houlbrook explore folklore in all its remarkable variations, from village rituals and fairytales to UFO legends and internet fan fiction. Travelling through a landscape of witches, wizards, and wicker men, they reveal how folklore has been researched and written about in the past and show how it continues to be lived in the present. At the same time, they provide the reader with a valuable toolkit for understanding how to interpret the diverse examples given.
The book's key message is that folklore is much more than the fossilised remains of a distant, rural past. Folklore is and always has been ubiquitous, dynamic, and political. It is a living tradition that draws from many sources, including migrant communities, and is forever being renewed and updated.