Lore of the Land: stories of wetlands, woods and weather

Thu 29 May 2025

Venue
The British Academy, 10-11 Carlton House Terrace, SW1Y 5AH
Live, unedited recording

How have landscapes been represented and perceived throughout time? What do the stories we tell about our environments reveal about ourselves? And how can our historical relationship with the land help us reconsider our connection to the natural world today? Discover the rich folklore of the British Isles with Academy Fellows and funded researchers.

Professor Melanie Giles FBA, Professor Fiona Stafford FBA and British Academy-funded researcher Professor Marilina Cesario each spotlight a different feature of the land: bogs, trees and weather. They investigate the myths and meanings associated with these natural phenomena, revealing our evolving relationship to the land in an age of climate breakdown.

Chair:

Mark Norman

Mark Norman is a public folklorist and writer. He is the creator and host of The Folklore Podcast, which aims to bring world-class experts in the fields of folklore and its associated areas of interest to a wide audience. With millions of downloads, it is ranked in the top 0.5% of shows globally. Mark is also the author of several award-nominated titles including, The Folklore of Devon and The Folklore of Wales: Ghosts. He is also the founder of the charity, The Folklore Library and Archive, and is a council member of The Folklore Society.

Speakers:

Professor Melanie Giles FBA

Melanie Giles is a British archaeologist and academic, specialising in Iron Age Britain. She is a Professor in European Prehistory at the University of Manchester and was elected a Fellow of the British Academy in 2022. Her research draws together strands of the archaeology of identity and personhood, with studies of landscape and place, alongside material culture and art. She uses a mix of ethnographic and archaeological theories and methodologies, to investigate both past and present communities.

Professor Fiona Stafford FBA

Fiona Stafford is Professor of English Language and Literature at the University of Oxford, a Fellow of Somerville College and Academic Lead for the Environmental Humanities programme at TORCH. She works on literature of the Romantic period and on their literary influences on modern poetry. Her research interests also include late 18th and early 19th-century culture; Irish and Scottish literature (post 1700); Archipelagic literature and art; place and nature writing (old and new); trees, flowers and their cultural history; environmental humanities; literature and the visual arts. Fiona was elected a Fellow of the British Academy in 2013, and she is also a Fellow the Royal Society of Edinburgh.

Professor Marilina Cesario

Marilina Cesario is a Professor in the School of Arts, English and Languages at Queen’s University Belfast. Her research interests include manuscript studies, science (mainly astronomy and weather), magic and prognostications in Latin, Old English and Middle English, and the relationship between weather, health and time. In 2017 she was awarded an APEX award by the UK’s national academies and a year later in 2018, she was the recipient of a ‘British Academy Rising Star Public Engagement Award’. She is currently completing a monograph on ‘The Signs of the Weather in Anglo-Saxon England’, for which she was awarded a Leverhulme Research Fellowship.


This event had live subtitles provided by StageTEXT, delivered by MyClearText.

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