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question:Read the passage below and answer the question or follow the instruction: Please provide examples of works that fall into the folk horror genre, as well as those that exemplify the eerie described in the text. Passage: We like to think we are rational, composed people; immune to superstition and primal fears, always connected to a worldwide web of friends and acquaintances. So why is there something so creepy about the darkness found outside our cities and suburbs? Why does a walk down a country lane after sunset raise goosebumps? Why does the crackling of a twig, the distant sound of footsteps, flood us with fear? Macfarlane is quick to (rightly) differentiate between the eerie and horror, contending that “Horror specialises in confrontation and aggression; the eerie in intimation and aggregation. Its physical consequences tend to be gradual and compound: swarming in the stomach’s pit, the tell-tale prickle of the skin.” But his approach in the piece seems a sideways entre to what has become known as folk horror. The boundaries of the folk horror sub-genre are, fittingly, loosely defined. Usually rooted in rural settings and landscapes, the works generally deal with a conflict or reckoning between contemporary lives and the echoes of the past, often featuring pagan rites and rituals, or more outright hauntings. While Macfarlane focuses on the eerie, it’s no accident that the works he incorporates into his essay are also those held up as exemplifying – though not limiting – folk horror. The classic literary horror of MR James and Arthur Machen shares space with albums like PJ Harvey’s Let England Shake. Also key to both Macfarlane’s exploration of the eerie and the underpinnings of folk horror are a handful of films, and novels for young readers. The term “folk horror” was popularized by writer and actor Mark Gatiss who, in the 2010 documentary series A History of Horror, used the phrase to describe a movement in English horror film in the late 1960s and early 1970s, which focused on rural settings and conflicts between the pagan and Christian worldviews. The Blood on Satan’s Claw and Witchfinder General serve as examples, but the key text here is 1973’s The Wicker Man, directed by Robin Hardy, in which a police officer is sent to a remote Scottish island to investigate the disappearance of a young girl, who the close-knit community denies even existed. The staunch (and tortured) Christian faith of Sergeant Howie comes into conflict first with the earthy country ways of the locals, and then with their veiled pagan beliefs, under the leadership of Christopher Lee’s Lord Summerisle. The eeriness Macfarlane describes builds relentlessly through the film to a climax that is at once uncanny and genuinely horrific – though notably without the gore and bloodshed we have come to expect from horror. Macfarlane also draws on two novels for young readers, one of which, Alan Garner’s The Owl Service (published in 1967 and winner of the Carnegie medal), uses contemporary teenagers holidaying in rural Wales to re-visit and re-enact a story from the Mabinogion, the 12th century Welsh compilation of earlier folklore. Meanwhile, in Susan Cooper’s The Dark Is Rising, 11-year-old Will Stanton discovers he is a key player in the epochs-old battle between the Light and the Dark, the story drawing once again on English folklore in a contemporary, though rural world. Both these novels are usually referred to as fantasy, but, as is often the case, their inclusion into the folk horror canon is rooted in tone and approach: each produces exactly the sense of eeriness Macfarlane describes so accurately. Whether one views the works as eerie or as folk horror, we’re not talking about simple taxonomy or academic distinction: at the risk of indulging in a rural metaphor, the field is thriving. Films as seemingly varied as The Blair Witch Project and The VVitch fit comfortably into the world of folk horror, and an argument could be made for the inclusion of last year’s Get Out: isolation in the country, strange customs, ages-old belief, threatening locals, etc. On the literary side, Sarah Perry’s The Essex Serpent juxtaposes the science-obsessed Victorian era with the folklore of coastal Essex, while the coastal pilgrimage in Andrew Michael Hurley’s The Loney draws us back to the classic conflict between Christianity and earlier faiths. Macfarlane himself needs to be included in this contemporary mix. While he refers in his essay to “four eerie episodes” he included in The Old Ways, his 2012 non-fiction exploration of the pathways criss-crossing the British Isles, he sells himself somewhat short. The entire book – and his similarly approached Holloway, a multi-genre exploration of the “psychogeography” of the sunken tracks worn into the countryside by “centuries of foot-fall, hoof-hit, wheel-roll & rain-run”– are suffused in the eerie, the ancestral shadows and mists. The worlds of folk horror and the eerie have also been a constant in traditional music for hundreds of years: folk songs serve as both examples and foundation of the form. Mists, magic, murder and isolation are the stock in trade for the folk world, whose songs continue to be re-explored and re-invented on an ongoing, almost cyclical basis. In 2014, for example, You Are Wolf released Hawk to the Hunting Gone, a collection of bird-themed traditional English folk songs marrying acoustic instrumentation with elements of contemporary electronica. It’s powerful and invigorating, driven by the vocals and arrangements of leader Kerry Andrew, winner of three British Composer awards. The second track on that album, “Swansong,” is a version of Molly Bawn, a 17th-century ballad which draws, in turn, on much older elements of the Swan Maiden myth. That track, with all its antecedents and history, also serves as the title and the spine of Andrew’s first novel. “Swansong” follows Polly Vaughan, a university student fleeing a tragic incident in London by accompanying her mother on vacation into the Scottish highlands. Polly is adrift, spending her days drunk or high, attempting to catch up on her studies, gradually becoming immersed in an ancient landscape of mist and rain, of floating lights and crackling branches in the dark, of closed-off locals and mysterious mines. The novel is a wonderful balancing act between Polly’s defensively sassy voice, constantly in denial of what is happening around her, and the reader’s awareness of an encroaching darkness. That “tell-tale prickle of the skin”? “Swansong” has that in spades. In Macfarlane’s essay, he suggests that, with the eerie, “contemporary anxieties and dissents are here being reassembled and re-presented as spectres, shadows or monsters.” Connections have been made to a turning inward in the wake of Brexit, in the same manner as The Wicker Man and its compatriots served as a reckoning with the disillusion of the hippie dream of back-to-the-land innocence. Whatever the socio-political underpinnings, what is significant about the approach is simply this: it works. Folk horror and the eerie hold appeal for both creators and audiences because it is our birthright to be afraid of what lives in the shadows, to walk softly through the dark, to feel, in the unknown, a questioning of our own place in history, in faith, in the universe. Those are the chills it raises. Those are the fears it stokes.
answer:What is folk horror and how is it related to the eerie? Folk horror is a sub-genre of horror that deals with conflicts between contemporary lives and the echoes of the past, often featuring pagan rites and rituals, or more outright hauntings, usually rooted in rural settings and landscapes. The eerie, on the other hand, is a sense of intimation and aggregation, which tends to be gradual and compound, such as swarming in the stomach’s pit, the tell-tale prickle of the skin. The works that fall into the folk horror genre are often held up as exemplifying the eerie, as both explore the strange and the uncanny, and produce exactly the sense of eeriness that characterizes the genre. In this sense, folk horror can be seen as a manifestation of the eerie as it focuses on rural and traditional settings, and conflicts between different belief systems.
question:Can you recommend any other works that fall into the folk horror genre?
answer:Yes, here are some examples of works that fall into the folk horror genre: 1. The Witch (2015) - a film set in colonial New England that follows a family's descent into madness and witchcraft. 2. A Field in England (2013) - a film set during the English Civil War, where a group of deserters is captured by an alchemist and forced to help him find treasure. 3. The Ritual (2017) - a film about a group of friends on a hiking trip in the Swedish wilderness who encounter a malevolent presence. 4. The Wailing (2016) - a South Korean film that follows a police officer's investigation into a series of bizarre and supernatural events in his village. 5. The Lighthouse (2019) - a film set in the late 19th century that follows two lighthouse keepers slowly descending into madness on a remote island. 6. The VVitch (2015) - a film set in colonial New England that follows a family's struggle to survive in the wilderness as they are plagued by witchcraft and demonic possession. 7. The Devil Rides Out (1968) - a film about a man's attempts to rescue his friend from a satanic cult. 8. The Borderlands (2013) - a film about a group of investigators sent to examine a church in rural England where strange occurrences have been reported. 9. Harvest Home (1978) - a novel by Thomas Tryon about a family's move from the city to a rural town that is revealed to have a dark and deadly secret. 10. The Vorrh Trilogy (2012-2017) - a series of novels by Brian Catling that blend fantasy, horror, and surrealism in a story set in a mythical and mysterious forest.
question:Interesting recommendations! Can you give me a brief summary of "The Blood on Satan's Claw" and why it is considered a key example of folk horror?
answer:"The Blood on Satan's Claw" is a 1971 horror film directed by Piers Haggard. Set in the 17th century English countryside, the film follows a group of villagers who become possessed by the demonic spirit of a satanic cult leader. The villagers fall under his influence, and begin committing heinous acts of violence and bloodshed. The film is considered a key example of folk horror because it touches on themes of pagan rituals, supernatural beliefs and traditional rural landscapes. The conflict between the pagan and Christian worldviews is further developed through the character of Reverend Fallowfield, who rejects the village's old ways but becomes corrupted by the demonic forces at work. In addition to these themes, the film is also known for its haunting imagery and eerie atmosphere, which draws on the uncanny and the macabre to create an unsettling sense of terror. Overall, "The Blood on Satan's Claw" represents a seminal example of the folk horror genre and continues to influence contemporary horror films and TV shows.
question:Can you give me a brief summary of "The Dark Is Rising" and what makes it a good example of folk horror?
answer:"The Dark Is Rising" is a 1973 novel by Susan Cooper that tells the story of 11-year-old Will Stanton, who discovers that he is the last of the Old Ones, a group of powerful beings tasked with keeping the Light safe from the Dark in a centuries-old battle. The novel is set in a rural area of England, and draws heavily on traditional folklore and mythology, such as the Arthurian legend and the Wild Hunt. It features a strong emphasis on the supernatural and the uncanny, and creates an eerie, foreboding atmosphere throughout. What makes "The Dark Is Rising" a good example of folk horror is its use of ancient beliefs and pagan rituals to create a sense of dread and unease. The conflict between the Old Ones and the Dark is rooted in traditional beliefs and superstitions, and the rural setting contributes to the overall atmosphere of the novel. Overall, "The Dark Is Rising" is a classic example of the folk horror genre, blending supernatural elements, ancient myths, and traditional beliefs to create a haunting and unsettling work of fiction.