A deviation from the normal format of the podcast for this edition by way of a change. In this episode, host Mark Norman introduces a reading of a fiction story which he wrote using themes from his research into Black Dog apparitions, and local tradition and folklore from his area of the world.
In this podcast, the story is read by Sam Burns. To listen and subscribe FREE, please use the player below. "The Padding Horror" is a Lovecraftian style short story which was originally written for an anthology of similar tales put together by authors voluntarily to raise money for the mental health charity MIND. An ebook of the original anthology can be purchased by donating any amount to the charity. To do this, please visit https://www.justgiving.com/fundraising/secretinvasion To find out more about Circle of Spears Productions, the company whose facilities the podcast is recorded with, and to explore a range of audio titles read by Mark, Sam and Mark's wife Tracey, please click here. To download the e-magazine supplement for this episode, please click here. Or to access all of our e-magazine supplements free, please sign up as a patron of the podcast here.
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Before naturally occurring events were understand by humans, they needed stories in order to explain them, much in the same way as we have seen with physical conditions such as the Old Hag phenomenon which we examined earlier in this season. In this episode of The Folklore Podcast, creator and host Mark Norman looks at the eclipse in folklore, both solar and lunar, and relates some of the mythological and traditional tales associated with these events, as well as some obscure lore on what you should and should not do while an eclipse takes place.
To listen to this episode FREE please use the player below. You can also subscribe on the player, or on the links to the right of this page. To download the e-magazine supplement for this episode, please click here. Or to access all of our e-magazine supplements free, please sign up as a patron of the podcast here.
Many people believe that the Chupacabra - the mysterious 'goatsucker' of New Mexico - is a folkloric creature of some age. Yet its origin cannot be traced earlier than 1995 and even then it has been reported in two very distinct forms. In this episode of The Folklore Podcast, our special guest is Benjamin Radford, author of the definite book on the lore of the creature, "Tracking the Chupacabra". In one of the most in-depth interviews given on the subject, Ben takes us through his 5-year long investigation into the Chupacabra, and explains how he believes he has solved the mystery of where it came from, and how its folklore will continue to disseminate.
To listen to this episode FREE please use the player below. You can also subscribe on the player, or on the links to the right of this page. To download the e-magazine supplement for this episode, please click here. Or to access all of our e-magazine supplements free, please sign up as a patron of the podcast here.
Creator and host of the Folklore Podcast, Mark Norman, examines the lore and practices of those who follow a Traditional pathway of Folk Magic: the Cunning Man, the Wise Woman, the pellar and the wayside witch.
This episode examines to what extent the role and the techniques of the Traditional Witch have changed over the last 200 years and how similar the folk magic beliefs are in more modern times. To listen to this episode FREE please use the player below. You can also subscribe on the player, or on the links to the right of this page. To download the e-magazine supplement for this episode, please click here. Or to access all of our e-magazine supplements free, please sign up as a patron of the podcast here.
The topics of spiritualism and mediumship have always been, and will always be, controversial. It is important to note that as folklorists, we should not be judging whether such things are 'real' or 'imagined', but rather the role that the phenomenon and the stories associated with it play within our cultures.
What is certainly the case is that there have, through history, been people who claimed mediumistic powers when they had none. In this episode of The Folklore Podcast, host Mark Norman examines some of the cases of séance room fraud through history, why people did it, how they did it and how the law brought them to book. To listen to this episode FREE please use the player below. You can also subscribe on the player, or on the links to the right of this page. To download the e-magazine supplement for this episode, please click here. Or to access all of our e-magazine supplements free, please sign up as a patron of the podcast here.
In this episode, host of The Folklore Podcast Mark Norman links up with Blake Smith and Dr Karen Stollznow of Monster Talk podcast in the US for a joint episode examining the field of spectral hounds. Monster Talk is an official podcast of Sceptic Magazine and takes a critical, but open minded look at fields of the paranormal, cryptozoology and folklore.
The show also goes more deeply into oral traditions and the use of the motif within folklore. This podcast is simultaneously released by Monster Talk and it is suggested that you listen to their version of the show too, as the edits will contain different material. Purchase the eZine for only .99p from our Folklore Shop HERE To listen to the podcast FREE, please use the player below. To listen to Monster Talk podcasts, please visit their website here
In this episode of The Folklore Podcast, host Mark Norman interviews special guest Carin Marais, a qualified language practitioner from South Africa and writer of speculative and fantasy fiction, about the ways in which fantasy authors use the folklore of the real world as a basis to form their own fictitious worlds. Also, how the fictitious folklore then begins to bleed back into our own lore. Using authors such as Tolkein, Terry Pratchett and Jim Butcher, as well as examples from her own Africaans and other cultures, Carin explores many well known books as well as drawing upon her own writing.
Listen to this episode FREE and subscribe to the podcast on the player below. To download the episode supplement for this episode, please click here. To find out more about Carin, please visit the guest page here. To become a patron of The Folklore Podcast and earn rewards, please click here. Episode 16 - Incubus and Succubus - with host Mark Norman and special guests Inkubus Sukkubus3/1/2017
This episode of The Folklore Podcast is the second part of our examination of the folklore surrounding sleep paralysis and Old Hag phenomena. This time we focus in on some aspects of the folklore relating to the witch trials, to the sexual aspects of the incubus and succubus demonic motifs ... and a look at the role of cheese in nightmares!
Following on from this, we are proud to present a special guest interview with pagan rock band Inkubus Sukkubus, who draw their name from this lore and who use much folklore in their songwriting. To listen and subscribe FREE to the podcast, please use the player below. To download the eZine supplement for this episode, please visit our Folklore Store. To support the Folklore Podcast and help us to keep producing this series, please click here
On this episode of the Folklore Podcast, host Mark Norman is joined by fellow Folklore Society committee member Dr Paul Cowdell. In what you might like to consider as a kind of 'Folklore 101', Paul goes back into history to examine the emergence of both the word Folklore and the discipline itself and traces them through to the modern day. What exactly was, and is, 'Folklore' and what do we study as 'Folklorists'? To listen free to this episode please use the player below, where you can also download the episode and subscribe to the podcast.
A full transcript of this valuable academic discussion on the nature of the subject with suggested reading is available as an eZine at ourFolkore Store. Patrons of the podcast receive this and all of the eZine supplements as they come out. To become a patron for as little as $1 a month please click here
In the days before we had a good understanding of many medical conditions, folklore would generate around them in order to reconcile what was happening and provide explanations. Such is the case with sleep paralysis, often referred to these days even in medical circles as Old Hag Syndrome. The name derives from the hallucinatory aspect where people often report a hag sitting on their chest preventing them from moving. In medieval folklore the demonic Incubus and Succubus were to be blamed for this condition.
This is the first of a two part examination of Old Hag Syndrome and the theme was suggested by one of our listeners to the Folklore Podcast. The second part of this episode will be in two episodes time and will feature some very special guests. This episode features a special guest contribution from Mythos podcast. Visit their site here. Listen and subscribe FREE on the player below, or subscribe with the links to the right of this page. To download the eZine supplement for this episode please visit our Folklore Shop. Patrons receive all of our supplements free. To become a patron please click here |
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December 2017
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