Time and Identity in Folk Horror
A Fiend in the Furrows, Queen's University Belfast, 19 September 2014
Firstly, I would like to thank the organisers of this conference for inviting me to speak on such an
interesting subject as folk horror. Although the honour of being the first speaker brings with it its own
sense of dread, a feeling of responsibility to set the whole thing running well, to establish some initial
definitions, and to sound like you know what you are talking about. Which is particularly a challenge with
such a nebulous field as folk horror, where there is a strongly defined core of what falls into the genre The Wicker Man, Blood on Satan's Claw, Witchfinder General - but where there has been less attention
paid to other texts, and where attempts to define just what it is that connects those three films to establish
the genre of 'folk horror' have been few, and as vague as attempts to define a genre usually are. Possibly
Adam Scovell and George Cromack will address some of those challenges in the next session on defining
folk horror.
Anyway, what I want to talk about today is a subject that arose from discussions with Craig, so I hope
that I don't tread on his toes too much. This is about time and identity in folk horror, which I consider to
be central ingredients to the genre, and that it is the treatment of those ingredients that I would suggest
helps to set folk horror apart from other subgenres of horror. There are particularly points where the folk
horror genre is close to and arguably overlaps with rural horror, eco-horror and the Lovecraftian weird
tale, but I believe that there are some differences which can be argued that make folk horror so distinct.
I'm going to be talking quite generally here, rather than focusing on a particular case study or set of case
studies, so that should mean that there are plenty of points for people to challenge later...
The title of this conference draws on Blood on Satan's Claw, the opening of which memorably features
[SLIDE] the discovery of a monstrous head in the furrows of an English field. This calls to mind a
comparison made by oral historian George Ewart Evans in describing the work of the folklorist as being
like discerning [SLIDE] 'the pattern under the plough':
the crop marks seen in the aerial photographs of some of our fields. Just as the pattern of the
ancient settlements is still to be seen in spite of years of repeated ploughings, so the
beliefs and customs linked with the old rural way of life in Britain have survived the pressures
and changes of many centuries. They are so old that they cannot be dated; and on this count alone
they are historical evidence, as valuable as the archaeological remains that are dug from those
sites so dramatically revealed since the development of the aeroplane.1
This description connects to a number of the ideas that I am going to examine in this paper, and ideas that
seem to me to be central to folk horror. Firstly, [SLIDE] there is the general association with agriculture
and a rural way of life. Secondly, [SLIDE] there is the idea that the patterns of old ways of living have
somehow managed to survive, albeit in a somewhat blurred form, into the present or near-present day.
Thirdly, [SLIDE] there is the notion that these ideas are not only old, but that they are ancient, 'so old that
they cannot be dated', with the sense that folklorists are thus somehow uncovering something innate in the
country with their explorations. Significantly, and as suggested by Evans in his comment relating this
purely to Britain, there is the particular idea that these surviving practices and traditions thus point to
something particular to the nation.
But we should remember that these folk horror texts are not just their content, but they are also cultural
products and so of their own time, even as we revisit, or are introduced to them, now. So I want to suggest
1
Evans, George Ewart, The Crooked Scythe: An Anthology of Oral History, London: Faber and Faber, 1993, p.2
Derek Johnston (derek.johnston@qub.ac.uk)
19 September 2014
that there are essentially three main aspects of time that we could use to focus this examination of time
and identity in folk horror. The first [SLIDE] is the relationships to the past depicted within the texts.
Secondly, [SLIDE] there is the historical context of the texts, including the amount of actual then-current
historical knowledge used within them. Thirdly, [SLIDE] there is the significance of nostalgia, which can
be found both within the texts, but more particularly within the audience relationships with those texts,
and also in their presentation in marketing, academic texts, etc.. And all of these relationships with time
feed in to notions of communities and identities.
I don't think that I will have much time to deal with the second issue, mainly because looking at historical
context requires focusing on particular texts and / or periods. Some of the comments that I make here may
be period specific, but I think that Darryl Jones will be focussing more on this issue in his plenary session
this afternoon.
To think about the audience for a moment, obviously we are all here because of an engagement with folk
horror, whether that is connected to personal nostalgia or not. So we share an aspect of our identities, and
demonstrate shared values and community, and so far, so basic audience studies.
But I don't want to get caught up in audience studies or fan studies, largely because they take a lot of time
and statistics and transcriptions to do properly. Instead, I will merely note that many of us have a sense of
nostalgia for these texts because of their associations with when we first encountered them or texts like
them, particularly if they were seen as part of an introduction to more adult fare, as a rite of passage. We
may also have a sense of nostalgia generated by material within the texts; whether it is memories of a 70s
childhood spurred by seeing the fashions and largely empty streets of Children of the Stones, the
appearance of particular actors, the sounds of particular music. And this need not be nostalgia generated
by memories of actual experience, but can be related to Alison Landsberg's concept of 'prosthetic
memory', the memory of events and periods that is created by media texts rather than by direct
experience. The prosthetic memory is a particular type of mediated memory, in that [SLIDE] 'In the
process the person does not simply apprehend a historical narrative but takes on a more personal, deeply
felt memory of a past event through which he or she did not live. The resulting prosthetic memory has the
ability to shape the person's subjectivity and politics.'2 So prosthetic memories are empathic, about feeling
the representation of the past, not just taking on a 'factual' account of it.
And here it is worth reminding ourselves of Svetlana Boym's definition of nostalgia [SLIDE]: 'Nostalgia
(from nostos - return home, and algia - longing) is a longing for a home that no longer exists or has never
existed. Nostalgia is a sentiment of loss and displacement, but it is also a romance with one's own
fantasy.'3 We often think of nostalgia as being comfortable, warming, cosy, and that is the element of the
'romance with one's own fantasy', where we take the past and create our own conception of it, a
conception that is connected to but not an accurate reflection of the reality of that past. As Boym reminds
us, nostalgia is also about a sense of loss, it is about pain at the absence of the past, even if that is a past
which never strictly existed.
So how does this idea of pain at the loss of the past fit with the representations of the past and our or
characters' relationships with it in folk horror? After all, it is typically the connection with the past which
brings about the 'horror' element. Yet this idea of nostalgia for the past as a part of horror is a strangely
persistent one in criticism. Maggie Kilgour, writing in relation to Gothic fiction, stated that [SLIDE]:
2
Landsberg, Alison, Prosthetic Memory: The Transformation of American Remembrance in the Age of Mass Culture,
New York: Columbia University Press, 2004, p.2
3
Boym, Svetlana, The Future of Nostalgia, New York: Basic Books, 2001, p.xiii
Derek Johnston (derek.johnston@qub.ac.uk)
19 September 2014
The gothic is symptomatic of a nostalgia for the past which idealises the medieval world as one of
wholeness ... This retrospective view of the past serves to contrast it with a modern bourgeois
society, made up of atomistic possessive individuals , who have no essential relation to each
other.4
There are obviously significant issues to be taken with this stance in relation to the Gothic, and Chris
Baldick and Robert Mighall do so very neatly in their chapter on 'Gothic Criticism'. But in terms of folk
horror, Kilgour's ideas seem rather more relevant, particularly as she goes on to claim that [SLIDE] 'the
gothic looks backwards to a kinder simpler paradise lost of harmonious relations that existed before the
nasty modern world of irreconcilable opposition and conflict'5 and that [SLIDE] 'Like Romanticism, the
gothic is especially a revolt against a mechanistic or atomistic view of the world and relations, in favour
of recovering an earlier, organic model.'6 That concept of the 'organic' is particularly relevant to the preindustrial appeal of many of folk horror's rural communities.
Folk horror is based strongly around the appeal of the past, and the idea that past ways of living and
behaving were not only more 'authentic', whatever that means, than modern ways, but that they provided
something additional which had been lost. Frequently, this appeal is based around two key pleasures of
community and sexual freedom, [SLIDE]pleasures which were central also to the ideals of many
alternative communities not only of the 1960s and 1970s, but throughout history. However, folk horror is
also conservative in pointing out that these appeals and pleasures come at a price. But where folk horror
tends to differ from other types of horror is that it does not say that this renders the dominant society as
the one that is more 'correct'; indeed, the appeal of the traditional community is often much clearer than
the appeal of the alternative. What it tends to suggest is that both traditional and modern ways of living
have their benefits, and their costs, and that neither is inherently superior. Rather, it is a question of
considering just what costs one is prepared to pay for the way of life that you desire.
But this is not just a question for the individual. As I pointed out with regard to Evans' ideas about oral
history and the survival of ancient practices, this is about cultural and national identity. This is about the
idea that cultural identity stems from place, and that this association is something magical or spiritual,
although some folk horror texts undermine this concept as much as they support it.
Returning to the original image from Blood on Satan's Claw, Leon Hunt has pointed out that the
appearance of the parts of the demon from the very soil in the film shows that [SLIDE] 'This Green and
Pleasant Land forever resists the onset of an Age of Reason'7. In other words, there is something
essentially non-rational in the very landscape, in the very character of the land itself, and so at the heart of
the nation. I would suggest that it is this anti-rationalism that is a key part of folk horror, but more
importantly it is the idea that we cannot escape the anti-rationalism of the past, that it is not only a key
part of our heritage, but that it is, to a large extent, a more accurate and appropriate understanding of the
universe and ourselves than materialistic rationalism could be. Maybe it would be more accurate to say
that it is not an anti-rationalism, but an alternative rationalism, one based around the power of magical
thinking, and supported by an alternative moral structure.
It could be said, then, that folk horror thus presents a rather bleak view of belief, of people, and of our
cultural and national identities. Pre-Christian faiths, or their reconstructions, are shown to be either
4
Kilgour, Maggie, The Rise of the Gothic Novel, London: Routledge,1995, p.11
Kilgour, Maggie, The Rise of the Gothic Novel, London: Routledge,1995, p.15
6
Kilgour, Maggie, The Rise of the Gothic Novel, London: Routledge,1995, p.11
7
Hunt, Leon, 'Necromancy in the UK: Witchcraft and the Occult in British Horror' in Steve Chibnall and Julian Petley,
eds. British Horror Cinema, London: Routledge, 2002, p.87
5
Derek Johnston (derek.johnston@qub.ac.uk)
19 September 2014
equally or more 'true' than Christianity or post-Enlightenment material rationalism, so there is no real sign
of advance and frequently a sense of loss of knowledge and understanding in the face of codified booklearning. Communities that abide by those old values and beliefs are often shown to be happier than those
that follow mainstream society. The landscape and nature are either unconcerned with human activity or
require placating to allow it to thrive. And, frequently, there are no supernatural powers involved in the
narrative at all, which exposes that everything is equal because all of the horror and evil comes only from
human activity.
By turning to pre-Christian beliefs and activities as part of their community identity, communities are
rejecting the beliefs and practices of invaders and outsiders. They are trying to recreate a more insular,
specific culture than one that has been influenced by internationalisation, globalisation, immigration. So
this is in many ways a traditionally conservative route, with each person knowing their place, although the
sexual liberation and focus on community rather than commerce may appeal less to the politically capitalC Conservative. But the appeal of the past in this sense is a mixture of the safely conservative and the
liberating, by moving the practitioners out of the mainstream of society and allowing them to express
their difference. It is also notable that these communities tend to be secretive rather than proselytisers,
rarely attempting to spread the word of their more 'authentic' culture or their better way of living.
And this connection of representations of paganism and a return to rural community as conservative is not
really that different from actual cultural movements. While modern paganism has certainly attracted those
who could be considered to the left of the political spectrum, with its associations with 'hippy' ideals of
reverence of nature, sexual openness, rejection of the military-industrial complex and its influence on
society, it developed from very conservative roots. Indeed, that very rejection of modernity was also a
rejection of the ideals of modern socialism, to employ technological and industrial processes to free the
individual and to level society. As Ronald Hutton puts it, [SLIDE] 'for many people in the early and midtwentieth century, industrialization, urbanization, and high technology all formed parts of a package with
socialism. Their [meaning modern pagans'] spiritual interests marched closely with three different
emotional aspects of right-wing ideology: nostalgia for a better past, elitism and suspicion of the masses,
and a desire for a free market, in magic and sex as in economics.'8 At the same time, paganism could be,
and has been and is, treated as celebrating feminine power, through the significance of the Goddess, and
communal power, through its emphasis on co-operation, or for radical action and a rejection of the status
quo. In other words, the politics of modern paganism, like the politics of folk horror, are as complex as
the individuals involved and cannot be readily simplified down to a definitive statement. Instead, each
text has to be considered individually.
Returning to the concept of the community, we find that it is tied very deeply to ideas of place, but
particularly to the ideas of a place occupied for a long period of time by the same community, with a
strong sense of continuity. There are differences here to the idea of deep time as encountered in, say, The
Stone Tape, where the connection of the ancient horror to people relates to whoever encounters it, and the
horror is ultimately that of a possibly pre-human existence, something so ancient that the contemplation
of how long ago it took place is a terrifyingly vertiginous experience. Yet one of the most significant
ways that folk horror engages with time is in the way that it presents a place where time collapses in on
itself, where different times touch each other and a sense of the present is frequently lost. This is perhaps
clearest in narratives such as Red Shift, The Children of the Stones or the Ghost Story for Christmas
'Stigma', each of which features connections across time, even cyclical narratives.
8
Hutton, Ronald, The Triumph of the Moon: A History of Modern Pagan Witchcraft, Oxford: Oxford University Press,
2001, p.361
Derek Johnston (derek.johnston@qub.ac.uk)
19 September 2014
Supernatural tales in general are also tied up with conceptions of the national and identity in their frequent
positioning of the foreign as the threatening 'other'. Whether it is an ominous foreign count, a mystical
object from overseas or foreign magical knowledge, foreignness is dangerous. This extends to people's
appearance, particularly in the Victorian era, where appearing somehow foreign was often a sign of being
suspect, as in the case of Helen Vaughn in Machen's 'The Great God Pan', who is described as [SLIDE]
'of a very different type from the inhabitants of the village; her skin was a pale, clear olive, and her
features were strongly marked, and of a somewhat foreign character.'9 Such figures were seen as
dangerous invaders, psychically or magically polluting the natural magics of the English mystical
landscape and in need of expulsion. Indeed, the whole of the narrative of M.R.James' 'A Warning to the
Curious' comes from the disruption of England's mystical Saxon defences for the purposes of personal
gain.
And here we can touch upon concepts of the mystical landscape, bound together no doubt by ley lines,
those ancient lines of mystical force connecting prehistoric points of power, invented by Alfred Watkins
in 1921 as nothing more than ancient pathways from geographical point to geographical point, and given
their magical inflection by John Mitchell in 1969. But this mystical version of ley lines adds to the sense
of the landscape as something living, with energy pulsing around it like blood, in a conception influenced
by feng shui, connecting the energy of the landscape with the energy of the people. And we can also
connect the particular conceptions of a mystical landscape with the increased interest in Asian mysticism
which arose in the 60s and 70s.
But back in Victorian and Edwardian supernatural fiction, foreignness also presented a method by which
the unusual, the irrational could be introduced into a rational, ordinary British society in which such
things just could not happen in the normal run of events. The expansion of the British Empire and its
trade through the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries also meant that it was an easy narrative solution to
introduce strangeness as something brought back by a traveller, or introduced through trade. In this way,
these fears also represented the trepidation associated with these regular introductions of novelty, of
foreign strangeness into British life. The supernatural tales also provided a way of working through some
of the fears about British engagement with foreignness, whether from the position of a powerful overlord
fearful of revenge through means not completely understood, or from a more liberal position concerned
with the effects of British rule on other societies and cultures, as well as with the potential for justified
attacks on Britishness and British power as a response.
For folk horror, though, the horror is native, not foreign. In some cases, it is clear that we are the ones
who should be considered other, whether because we are outsiders to the place where the horror dwells,
as with many of Algernon Blackwood’s tales, or because we are newcomers as a species.
However, it can be that the supernatural power is one that is known by people but is not necessarily tied
to folk practices that are still active. There, the horror can be with encountering an ancient power,
realising that the culture used to know how to deal with it, and the protagonists then have to find a way to
uncover that lost knowledge in order to survive. If they can. Again, the recovery of cultural practices that
have been lost, and the reinterpretation of these practices for modern use, are central to the genre. For
example, the Torchwood episode 'Small Worlds' deals with fairies who are associated with an ancient
woodland area, Roundstone Wood, that has remained untouched while all was developed around it. The
fairies are beings who exist outside time, and the only way that they can be dealt with is to allow them to
occasionally take away a child to join them. It is only the timeless Captain Jack, his historical encounter
9
Machen, Arthur, 'The Great God Pan' in Stephen Jones and Dave Carson, eds., H.P.Lovecraft's Book of Horror,
London: Robinson, 1994, p.394
Derek Johnston (derek.johnston@qub.ac.uk)
19 September 2014
with the fairies, and the clues left through folklore, that allows the team to realise that this is the only
solution: let the fairies take the child they want, or the whole world will burn. Another example might be
Rare Exports [SLIDE], the 2010 Finnish film which presents the horrifying 'true' origins of Santa Claus,
and shows how folk tales have to be mined for information to successfully deal with the supernatural
source.
And Rare Exports brings me to a number of considerations about folk horror, which I suspect I will not
have the time to cover in detail, so hopefully others will pick them up.
One is the question of folk horror and nation. When Craig and I first talked about this conference, we
were slightly stuck when trying to think of non-British examples of folk horror, although a number of
possible candidates have since been identified and one of them, Valerie and Her Week of Wonders, is
showing tonight. I learned at a conference in Sweden last week that there are many Scandinavian novels
and films which present a harsh, supernaturally antagonistic environment which threatens and ultimately
destroys modern, educated, frequently university-affiliated, urbanites who decide to journey into the
country. This connects to the concerns over the disruption of the environment, and many of these
narratives sounded to me that they are more strictly eco- or environmental horror than folk horror.
However, they are also about the concern of the modern Scandinavian that they have, in the short time
since the Second World War, largely lost touch with their ancient connections to the land, by becoming a
primarily urban society.
This is also a concern that is found in British folk horror, as our communities became fragmented and
scattered in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries in order to move to the cities to benefit from the
developments of industry, commerce and globalisation. In this process of scattering, it was believed that
rituals, practices, narratives, songs and rhymes could be retained, but would lose their connection to the
original place they developed in, and so lose their specificity. Antiquarians and folklorists were thus
needed to rediscover these original meanings. According to Ronald Hutton, Mary Beard's study of
Frazer's The Golden Bough suggests that for Frazer 'the book had represented a journey through an
underworld of belief, in which the familiar rituals of the British countryside were integrally linked with
savage and foreign rites in an exciting and unsettling way.'10 So these familiar songs, dances, etc. were
revealed to be excitingly unfamiliar. And note that use of the word 'savage', which suggests so much:
otherness, unleashed passions, freedom from civilisation's constraints, as well as danger, violence,
animality, primitiveness. As I have already mentioned, Leon Hunt has pointed out that the appearance of
the parts of the demon from the very soil in Blood on Satan's Claw shows that [SLIDE] 'This Green and
Pleasant Land forever resists the onset of an Age of Reason' (Hunt, 2002: 87), suggesting that an appeal
of this supposedly uncovered mystical and savage past within our nursery rhymes and folk songs and
dances is the recovery of a freedom of emotional expression, freedom from the constraints of so-called
civilisation. And the appeal of recovery suggests that this freedom is something that is perceived to be
lost. In Scandinavia the loss is a more recent one, and one that has occurred largely alongside growing
concerns over the need to conserve nature against damage from human activity. So this suggests that,
while folk horror is possible in various national contexts, and will have similar concerns, it is also
something that is going to be differently inflected in different nations.
Another issue is that of the memorialisation of the ancient within culture, and particularly with forgotten
folklore. What is important here is the idea that much of this folklore, being pre-Christian, is also from
before the dominance of literacy, and so it very much has to be pieced back together from remnants and
10
Hutton, Ronald, The Triumph of the Moon: A History of Modern Pagan Witchcraft, Oxford: Oxford University Press,
2001, p.113
Derek Johnston (derek.johnston@qub.ac.uk)
19 September 2014
shadows. These are traced, or so the folklorists would have us believe, through memories of songs and
rhymes, and through folktales. Indeed, the scholar leader of the communities that are central to folk horror
has often pieced together the rites and rituals of that community through their recording in and
interpretation from books; think about the Victorian Lord Summerisle, or Fisher in Robin Redbreast.
And the mention of folktales leads us to the third question or idea. The narrative typically goes that
folktales were for children and adults, but that they are preserved largely through versions which have
been reinterpreted for children. Indeed, the notion that the 'true' or 'original' version of a fairy story is
something that is much more vicious, violent and scary than the more familiar, 'Disneyfied' version is
something that has become strongly embedded. So there is the idea that there are remnants of truth to be
found in children's stories, but that they have to be traced back to a truth that is horrifying, and certainly
not for children. The idea of folk stories as being appropriate for children seems to have developed from
the idea that these stories were themselves as 'simple' as narratives from 'primitive' cultures, and so not
appropriate for adults, even if collectors and adapters like Perrault or the Grimms were originally writing
for a largely adult audience.
Mention of the Grimms reminds us that, like their collections of the stories of the German Volk, folk
horror is partially concerned with the legitimacy of national identity. If the past in folk horror depicted is
real, it is often horrific. Any right of domain, any claim to the land, is typically by bloodshed and horrific
pacts. And there is frequently a sense of a prior claim from someone or something else, be they fairy folk
or demons. Other pasts, as in The Wicker Man, are shown to be creations, of romanticised pasts, but
ultimately illegitimate in terms of demonstrating a long-standing connection to the place.
This fits, of course, with the idea that national identity is largely a development of the late eighteenth
century and the spread of rapid communication technologies and trade. This is perhaps most famously
summed up in Benedict Anderson's Imagined Communities, and I find myself driven to quote probably
the most commonly quoted part of this book. Anderson describes the nation as [SLIDE] 'imagined
because the members of even the smallest nation will never know most of their fellow-members, meet
them, or even hear of them, yet in the minds of each lives the image of their communion.'11 This fits with
the idea of the community in folk horror more in the way that these communities are imagined across
time, and that they appear familiar, yet unfamiliar, to us as part of our national identity. Perhaps a more
useful concept to take is Georgina Boyes adaptation of Anderson's ideas, as 'the imagined village'. This
focuses on the rural, communal nature of folk material, but also points to the way in which this material
has been shaped historically by those who use it as part of their lives, and those who have collected,
codified and interpreted it.
Boyes was writing in relation to the English folk music and dance revival, and the connections between
folk horror and folk music are going to be considered by Clare Button and Eamon Byers tomorrow, and
we will be able to experience some of our own musical folk horror with Sharron Kraus and Clare Button
that evening. Even in texts which do not utilise folk music in the same way that The Wicker Man does,
Boyes' assessment of the frameworks in which folk revivalists operated is of relevance to the use of folk
material in horror films, and particularly in relation to ideas of time and identity.
It is one of those things that only needs pointing out because it is so obvious that it is easy to overlook,
but the word 'folk' refers to the people, to the ordinary person, rather than to the laird in his castle. It
particularly has associations with the rural, and with the pre-industrial. The antiquarians and collectors
11
Anderson, Benedict, Imagined Communities: Reflections on the Origin and Spread of Nationalism, Revised
Edition, London: Verso, 2006, p.6
Derek Johnston (derek.johnston@qub.ac.uk)
19 September 2014
who gathered songs and stories concentrated on the rural communities, the more the remote the better, in
their search for the purest expressions of the 'natural' culture of the country. These collectors often saw
these songs and stories as the remnants and survivals of ancient narratives and traditions. Of course, both
songs and tales have been modified, retold, resung, forgotten and remembered and misremembered,
edited, bowdlerised, recreated and evolved. So what is left of any original core is rather questionable. But
what uses those songs and stories are put to, now those are interesting.
Michael Brocken, like Boyes, has argued that the folk revival has often had a nationalist element to it,
typically one originating from middle classes fearful of the encroachment of American popular culture.
Note here the differentiation between popular and folk, a distinction that is still made, and which is
reinforced in cultural studies with the differentiation made by the Frankfurt School between the massproduced popular outputs of the culture industry and authentic folk creativity. And that might encourage
us to consider how folk horrors can be seen as showing an 'authentic' community fighting back against the
forces of consumerism. Or are they a demonstration of how the fight against the forces of consumerism
can only cause disruption and terror for nice, middle-class consumers who take a wrong turning
somewhere?
In any case, folk implies a group, the people, a community, and this is particularly evident in the
centrality of community to The Wicker Man, Robin Redbreast, Wake Wood and John Buchan's Witch
Wood. The idea that these communities are continuing ancient practices, and that those practices have
power, implies a concomitant lack of power in the mainstream society. It may be that the power of these
practices is on a purely human level, binding the community together and providing them with
communitas, as in The Wicker Man. Or it may be that it relates to an actual supernatural power, as in
Wake Wood, in which case there is a definite sense that this is a community with access to superior
knowledge or at least awareness of the true nature of things.
This aspect of a group having secret knowledge also appeals to our ideas of the occult, of secret societies
and hidden knowledge. However, unlike stories of surviving Knights Templar and the secrets of the Holy
Grail, or of Freemasonry, or many other narratives of secret societies, the folk horror model is not about
the privileged elite keeping secrets from the rest of us, but is about the ordinary people holding the power
of true knowledge. The horror of folk horror, then, is that it tells us, the formally educated, the urban and
urbane, that we do not know the truth, that we do not understand, and its empowering appeal lies in its
placing true understanding in the hands of the ordinary people, the folk.
What becomes interesting from this point of view is how frequently the leader of the community is
presented as an educated man, that book learning and the associated understanding of history is needed to
maintain these folk practices. Of course, The Wicker Man shows us folk practices which are imposed
inventions, or re-inventions, used by an Anglicised Victorian lord to control his Scottish tenants with a
recreation, ultimately, of a ritual derived from Julius Caesar's propaganda against the Gauls. However, as
Sergeant Howie points out, as the rituals have taken hold in the community, who will they turn to as a
more powerful sacrifice when the crops fail again but their leader. Frazer's Golden Bough, itself
responsible for much interest in folk practice as true practice, would suggest that it is the king who must
die to return the summer. Creating, or re-creating, the community into the form that one desires would, it
is suggested, therefore be a choice that would ultimately lead to one's own doom, although that act of
sacrifice would also be a demonstration that the imposition of this culture had worked and that it had been
fully adopted by the community.
So the figure of the community leader is often of someone who is at least slightly outside the community,
in terms of class and education, and whose education is significant in the creation or revival of rituals.
This can be seen not only in The Wicker Man, but also in Robin Redbreast, where the most sinister figure
is the nearest the village has to an intellectual, or in Wake Wood, or Children of the Stones, where the
Derek Johnston (derek.johnston@qub.ac.uk)
19 September 2014
cyclical repetition of events within the village is exploited by an astronomer from outside the village.
However, these leaders can be understood as not just outsiders exploiting ignorant country folk with their
superior, albeit unconventional, knowledge. The concept of the cyclicality of time and the recurrence of
events also suggests that they can be seen as contemporary embodiments of community leaders, of sages,
druids and kings. Indeed, this is pointed to directly in both Robin Redbreast and Children of the Stones,
which emphasise narratives of return, for these figures in particular.
The communities are also significant in that they represent one potential difference between folk horror
and rural horror, if we want to find such boundaries. So rural horror uses the sense of isolation of the
individual or small group within the countryside, and it is either the countryside itself or something
supernatural that exploits that situation to create a present danger. Something like Dog Soldiers is an
obvious example, or The Long Weekend.
Folk horror, on the other hand, is still about people, about folk, not about monsters or forces of nature. If
there is a supernatural power involved, as with The Owl Service, Wake Wood or Children of the Stones,
what is important to the narrative will be how that power is interacted with and used by the people of the
community. Thus, I would also argue that narratives structured around a lone survival of something from
folk belief, such as the presence of a witch in Nigel Kneale's Murrain, moves a text out of the folk horror
category, where the presence of a coven which effectively runs a village in Hammer's The Witches does
move that film into the category. But I'm willing to discuss that point, possibly in the next panel.
I expect that some of you have already spotted a significant issue with this emphasis on community in
folk horror: it displaces one of the central texts of the genre to the periphery, or even removes it from the
genre entirely. Witchfinder General is the problem text, as it does not really focus on a community
preserving ancient, or allegedly ancient, beliefs and practices which go against the cultural norm. Instead,
it is a rather more straightforward narrative of a person of power using superstitions to fulfil their desires,
putting them up against our hero in the process, against a backdrop of civil disruption in the form of the
English Civil War. There is no real collision of belief systems, or of societies, and the conflict between
Royalist and Parliamentarian really takes place in the background, to serve primarily as an indicator that
society in general is in turmoil, and that at such times unscrupulous people will take advantage of this to
serve their own aims.
But we are moving away here from the idea of time and its relevance to folk horror. And we are also
running short of time.
I have thrown out a number of ideas here about folk horror, time and identity. I do not think that there is
any one approach that is applicable across all of folk horror, but I do think that folk horror draws upon the
ideas of the survival of ancient practices amongst remote communities that particularly drove the folk
revival of the early twentieth century. These conceptions have passed into common thought, despite the
many problems that become apparent on close inspection; as Boyes points out, the survival hypothesis
rather depends on the individuals making up rural communities having a complete lack of creativity and
excellent recall for hundreds, if not thousands of years. But, accurate or not, we are fascinated with the
idea that there can be ancient knowledge that survives, and that, if it does survive, it is because it is
something that is useful to us, either because of a present or recurring threat, or in forming a community
that can better survive the future. We also connect the idea of these survivals to notions of identity,
specifically local identity, but with the implication that this local identity is part of a wider, national
identity which has become lost, overwritten over the centuries. Folk horror thus raises the question of
who we are, not just as individuals, but as community. And, for me, one of the strengths of the genre is
that it very rarely offers us any answers.
Thank you.
Derek Johnston (derek.johnston@qub.ac.uk)
19 September 2014
r own merits.
Derek Johnston (derek.johnston@qub.ac.uk)
19 September 2014