Tuesday 26 May 2:00pm, Derby Theatre Community Hub DE1 2NF
Across Europe, churches feature carved male heads with foliage bursting from the mouth, nostrils or, in more grotesque examples, the eyes.
In the 20th Century, the folklorist Lady Raglan linked these with popular rituals and aspects of myth to posit a pagan god, the 'Green Man', of whom these sculptures were supposedly traces. The Green Man has subsequently been adopted in modern paganism as well as eco-activism (and he featured too on invitations to the Coronation in 2023). However, the figure also connects to a darker tradition in literature, concerning something sinister in the forest.
This talk will interpret aspects of this tradition, which includes the early twentieth-century horror stories of Algernon Blackwood, and the densely allusive poetry of Eric Mottram's 1981 collection A Book of Herne.
Dr Robin Sims leads the undergraduate English programme at the University of Derby. He has published on the Green Man and critical theory, as well as the television series Twin Peaks.
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