ACADEMIC ARTICLES AND TALKS
ABOUT MYTHS, LEGENDS
FOLK TALES AND FAIRY TALES
ARTICLES FOR FLS NEWS
the newsletter of the Folklore Society
Ethical Issues in Keeping Folk Narratives Alive (February 2025)
Old Oral Storytelling Customs (June 2023)
Viking Age Superstitions (November 2021)
Rituals to Conserve Food Resources (February 2020)
TALKS PRESENTED TO
THE FOLKLORE SOCIETY
Keeping Myths, Legends and Folk Tales Alive (2024 – also presented to the University of Herfordshire and University of Chichester)
Old Faery Narratives of Britain and Ireland (2023)
Dragon Kings of Flood and Drought (2023)
In the Beginning All Wisdom was with the Animals: Exploring Native American Myths (2022)
Death Versus Cultural Appropriation: Should outsiders tell other cultures' traditional tales to keep them alive? (2022)
Spinners, Servants and Midwives: Women at Work in British and Irish Folk Narratives (2018)
Narrative Expressions of Marriage in Native American Myths (2017)
TALK PRESENTED TO
YORK ARCHAEOLOGICAL TRUST
Opportunity Lost: Attitudes of Norse Travellers and Traders in Vinland (2020)
published by the
Sussex Centre for Folklore, Fairy Tales and Fantasy
at the University of Chichester:

Fluid Boundaries: Animals and People in Native American Myths
(Winter 2018)
How Authentic is 'Authentic'?
(Winter 2016)
(Winter 2013)
Dragons of East and West
(Summer 2013)
on women at Work in British and Irish folk tales
(from the 2018 Folklore Society conference)
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Top Ten Viking Stories' on the BBC History Extra website
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'Are Traditional Tales Sexist?
in the professional children's books journal,
Books for Keeps