Tag Archives: history

Welcoming our new Postdoctoral Researcher

We are delighted to welcome Dr Sophie Parkes-Nield as our new Postdoctoral Researcher on the National Folklore Survey project. 

Dr Sophie Parkes-Nield along with some of her folklore related publications.

Sophie recently gained her doctorate from Sheffield Hallam University in creative writing and folklore exploring how contemporary novels and novelists represent the calendar custom in England. We caught up with her to learn more about her research and interests.

Hello Sophie! We’re looking forward to working with you. What was it about the National Folklore Survey project that inspired you to apply?

I finished my PhD in September and was teaching a course for short fiction publisher, Comma Press, on ‘writing fiction with folklore’. The National Folklore Survey project sounded perfect as it allows me to combine my fascination for English folklore and specifically calendar customs, with the skills I had honed in marketing and communications during the fifteen years prior to my return to full-time academia in 2019. It’s the perfect time to conduct a survey such as this, it’s much needed, and I feel so lucky to be able to work on it.

Why do you think a survey is ‘much needed’?

Folklore seems to be everywhere at the moment: on the television, in films and novel; folklore-based podcasts are exploding. Most excitingly, to my mind, artists and practitioners are looking at how or what aspects of folklore are being used, and whose folklore is being included and excluded. Yet we don’t have a sound idea of how folklore resonates with people living in England today, we don’t know what ‘folklore’ means to them. What excites me about this project is the potential for a dataset that can be used as a benchmark, or a marker for beliefs and behaviours, that we can share with anyone – with everyone!

When did you become interested in folklore?

I first ‘discovered’ English folk and traditional music when I was a teenager, and as my love for the music grew, I began to take more of an interest in folklore and the wider folk arts. I grew up in North Oxfordshire where there is a strong, proud Cotswold morris dancing tradition which I slowly learnt to love – much to the bemusement of my friends and family – but I have only very recently become a morris dancer myself, albeit in the North West tradition, where I now live. Folklore is such a vast subject which is – obviously and necessarily – continually evolving and mutating, and I am constantly reminded how little I know. I’m hoping immersing myself in the National Folklore Survey will remedy that!

Finally, what aspect of the project are you most looking forward to?

It sounds strange, but I’m really looking forward to testing the survey with focus groups. I love that moment in a focus group – or any kind of discussion group – when your perception shifts and you see something in a wholly different way, that gives your project or idea a whole new thread or angle. It always leads to more work, of course, but it’ll be for the better.

Thanks, Sophie!

If you would like to know more about Sophie, her research and her writing, you can visit her website HERE.

The National Folklore Survey for England

CCL are pleased to announce the launch of the National Folklore Survey for England #NFS

Photographs of English Calendar customs across the seasons (from top left – The Haxey Hood, Castleton Garland, Barwick in Elmet Maypole Rising, The Burning of the Bartle, The Antrobus Mummers, Allendale New Year’s Eve Tar Barrel Parade) © Andrew Robinson 2024.

This AHRC funded research project is being led by Dr David Clarke with Dr Diane Rodgers from Centre for Contemporary Legend at SHU along with Dr Ceri Houlbrook and Professor Owen Davies, who founded the MA Folklore Studies at the University of Hertfordshire. as co-leads The project’s international co-lead is Professor Christopher Bader, chair of the Department of Sociology, Chapman University, California, who has directed two large belief surveys in the USA.

The project aims to capture an accurate snapshot of the folklore of multicultural England and gain a new understanding of the impact of colonial and empire narratives on previous surveys. The timing is important as 2024 marks the 60th anniversary of the original Survey of Language and Folklore at the University of Sheffield and the ratification by the UK Government of the UNESCO convention for Safeguarding of the Intangible Cultural Heritage (ICH).

For full details please Visit our new ‘National Folklore Survey’ section by clicking the NFS tab in the menu bar above.

#NFS lead contact email: david.clarke@shu.ac.uk