Find out more about how The Lecture List works.
Coronavirus situation updateOur lecture organisers may or may not have had time to update their events with cancellation notices. Clearly social gatherings are to be avoided and that includes lectures. STAY AT HOME FOLKS, PLEASE. |
Find out what you can do to keep The Lecture List online
|
Deborah Hyde talks on the history and folklore of fear, and how legends have been made from ordinary people.
The Vampire has fascinated Western Europe from the early 1700s, but the tradition was a real part of Eastern European lives for a considerable time before that. In the last three centuries, the icon has been taken up by art of all kinds - literature, film and graphics - and it has had a lasting effect on fashion and culture. But what is the authentic story behind tales of the predatory, living dead and can we understand a little more about being human by studying these accounts?
We will look at recent attempts to understand the folklore and try to work out how an Eastern European ritual made its way to late nineteenth century New England, USA.
Deborah Hyde writes, lectures internationally and appears on broadcast media to discuss superstition, religion and belief in the supernatural.
She uses a range of approaches and disciplines from history to psychology to investigate the folklore of the malign and to discover why it is so persistent throughout all human communities and eras. She is currently writing a book 'Unnatural Predators' and is the Editor-in-Chief of The Skeptic Magazine.
Speaker(s): |
|
|
|
Date and Time: |
21 July 2013 at 11:00 am |
Duration: | 1 hour 30 minutes |
|
|
Venue: |
Conway Hall |
|
|
Tickets: |
£3/£2 |
Available from: |
Tickets on the door. |
Additional Information: |
Free admission to Conway Hall Ethical Society Members. |
Register to tell a friend about this lecture.
If you would like to comment about this lecture, please register here.
Any ad revenue is entirely reinvested into the Lecture List's operating fund