Tag Archives: legend

ISCLR – 40th Anniversary – Perspectives on Contemporary Legend – Panels and Presentations

We are excited to share our final schedule for the coming week’s ISCLR Conference. In addition to 13 themed panels and 33 presentations the conference includes a ghost walk around Sheffield City and Cathedral; a performance by the Grenoside Sword Dancers; a showing of folklore related films by SHU Illustration students; a conference banquet: and a day trip to the Peak District including a visit to Peak Cavern (The Devils Arse) in Castleton and a guided tour of Eyam.

Please find below a pdf showing a breakdown of the panel topics – a pdf of abstracts will be shared soon.

40th International Perspectives on Contemporary Legend Conference

Register Now!

We’re pleased to open registration for the 40th International Perspectives on Contemporary Legend Conference, held this year June 26-30, 2023 at Sheffield Hallam University, South Yorkshire, UK, and hosted by the Centre for Contemporary Legend. 

There will be a series of themed panels including:

  • Body Horror
  • Social Media
  • Furries and Ghosts
  • Politics, fake news, rumour
  • Conspiracy & Belief
  • Nation & Indigienous legend
  • Haunted Houses
  • Digital Legends
  • Monsters
  • X-Files and UFOs
  • Crime & Moral Panics

The conference includes an optional ‘Legend and Landscape‘ excursion to the Peak District National Park, with a guided visit to the Plague VIllage of Eyam (see HERE) and a tour of Peak Cavern in Castleton (see HERE).

There will also be a conference meal at the Showroom Cinema and an evening event (watch out for further details!)

We look forward to seeing you in SHEFFIELD!

Registration

To register please use the online form HERE

Or use the PDF below:

Additional Info

A few notes about this year’s conference:

  • This year, ISCLR is pleased to extend members-only registration rates for members of The Folklore Society (FLS). 
  • We have a hotel booking tool with special conference rates for two hotels in Sheffield: the Leonardo Hotel Sheffield and the Novotel Sheffield Centre. Book HERE

If you would like to join ISCLR please use this online form HERE 

Or use the PDF below:

— 

For further information on ISCLR please contact:

Virginia Siegel (she/her/hers)

Secretary, International Society for Contemporary Legend Research

Professor of Practice, University of Arkansas Libraries

Email: isclr.secretary@gmail.com or vdsiegel@uark.edu

CALL FOR PAPERS – PERSPECTIVES ON CONTEMPORARY LEGEND CONFERENCE

CALL FOR PAPERS – PERSPECTIVES ON CONTEMPORARY LEGEND 

40th conferenceInternational Society for Contemporary Legend Research

Hosted by the Centre for Contemporary Legend at Sheffield Hallam University

Sheffield, South Yorkshire, UK | 26-30 June, 2023 

The International Society for Contemporary Legend Research is pleased to announce that the 2023 Perspectives on Contemporary Legend 40th International Conference will be held in the Dorothy Fleming Lecture Theatre, Charles Street building at Sheffield Hallam University, 26-30 June 2023

Poster designed by Doc Rowe for the first ‘Perspectives on Contemporary Legend’ conference, July 1982

The 40th conference will celebrate the return of legend scholars to the city where academic inquiry into this new genre of folklore began in the summer of 1982. Not only will we aim to celebrate that special anniversary but also to examine how contemporary legend scholarship has evolved and expanded its remit to incorporate new stories, rumors, conspiracy theories, fake and folk news in the age of pandemics and perma-crises.

SHU’s city campus is located conveniently alongside Sheffield’s Midland Railway station that has direct rail links with London St Pancras International (2 hours 10 minutes) and Manchester International Airport (approx 1 hour 30 minutes). The organisers are making arrangements for a special group rate with the Novotel on Arundel Gate, a few minutes walk from the venue and within easy reach of city centre pubs and restaurants.

The conference will be organised as a series of seminars at which most attendees will present papers. Concurrent sessions will be avoided so that all attendants can hear all papers. Presentations will be 20 minutes with an additional ten minutes for discussion. Proposals for papers on all aspects of contemporary, urban, or modern legend research are sought, as are those on any legends, traditions and stories that circulate actively at present or have circulated at an earlier historical period. Proposals for special panels, seminars and any other related areas to contemporary legend and folklore are encouraged. A few possible themes we could highlight for 2023 include:

  • Is the Truth still out there? Marking the 30th anniversary of The X-Files TV show
  • Under or mis-represented cultural communities/identities in legend studies
  • New legends from post-industrial urban areas 
  • Folk Horror: Cultural and global diversity

The organisers are Centre for Contemporary Legend co-founders David Clarke, Diane Rodgers and Andrew Robinson. To submit a proposal, please forward a title and abstract (250-300 words) by February 15, 2023 by e-mail to David Clarke (david.clarke@shu.ac.uk) and Diane Rodgers (d.rodgers@shu.ac.uk). 

As part of conference events, we will also be hosting film and multimedia screenings, we encourage submissions of short films or multimedia (5 -30 minutes in length) exploring, related to or influenced by Folklore, Legend or Custom as part of a curated evening of screenings – please send expressions of interest and/or links by February 15, 2023 to Andrew Robinson – (andrew.robinson@shu.ac.uk) (NB – further info will be provided shortly)

Sheffield, with a history brimming with stories and legends, is the UK’s greenest city with more trees per person than any city in Europe. Like Rome, the city is said to be built upon seven hills. One third of its area falls within the Peak District National Park, with its hills and moors forming a ‘golden frame’ around the valley of the river Don. Sheffield is world famous for its cutlery and steel industries symbolised by the statue of Vulcan, the Roman god of fire and forge, that stands on the city’s Victorian Town Hall.

Relief of Vulcan, the Roman god of fire and forge, Sheffield Town Hall – image David Clarke.

Sheffield was founded in Anglo-Saxon times as a settlement on the river Sheaf that marked the boundary between the kingdoms of Mercia and Northumbria, the ‘Sheaf-field’ or town beside the boundary river. Following the Norman Conquest, William de Lovetot built a castle at the confluence of the rivers Don and Sheaf to represent Norman power over the North of England. Sheffield Castle became one of the largest strongholds in the medieval England and in Elizabethan times it became the jail of Mary Queen of Scots. During the summer of 2023 archaeologists will begin excavating the ruins of that castle including its huge gatehouse as part of a £15 million project to regenerate the historic centre of Sheffield.

Comprehensive information on the conference will be forthcoming and will also soon be available on both HERE and on our Facebook Page. We look forward to welcoming you to this conference, the area, and the trading of our stories in our annual reunion of researchers who work on this ever current and growing legends! 

For more information on the International Society for Contemporary Legend Research and to learn how to join, visit: https://contemporarylegend.org/