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Gillian Bennett
Gillian Bennett (née Lawley; 25 September 1939 – 13 December 2023) was a British folklorist, known for her work on contemporary legends.
Bennett was born on 25 September 1939. She enrolled as a mature graduate student at the University of Sheffield in 1978, where she studied at the Centre for English Cultural Tradition and Language (CECTAL) under the supervision of J. D. A. Widdowson. She gained both masters and doctoral degrees, and would retain ties to CECTAL as an honorary research associate.
Bennett's PhD thesis was titled Aspects of supernatural belief, memorate and legend in a contemporary urban environment and "aimed to move away from the antiquarian bias of previous work on the folklore of the supernatural in order to shed light on present day attitudes and concepts".
In 1982, CECTAL hosted a conference on Contemporary Legend. This initiated a number of succeeding conferences on the topic, leading to the creation in 1988 of the International Society for Contemporary Legend Research (ISCLR).
Bennett was a founder member of ISCLR, as was Paul Smith, a fellow University of Sheffield graduate. In collaboration with Smith, Bennett edited four of the five-volume Perspectives on Contemporary Legend essay series (1984–1990), which were based on the Sheffield Contemporary Legend conferences. She also co-wrote with Smith Contemporary Legend: The First Five Years (1990), co-compiled Contemporary Legend: A Folklore Bibliography (1993), co-edited Contemporary Legend: A Reader (1996) and co-authored Urban Legends: A Collection of International Tall Tales and Terrors (2007).
ISCLR has been described as of great significance "not just to legend studies but to also to the fortunes of English folklore scholarship in general" and seen in the 1990s as "probably the most prominent evidence of England's re-emergence as a major contributor to world folklore scholarship".
Bennett's two major published works are Traditions of Belief: Women and the Supernatural (1987) – which was expanded into Alas, Poor Ghost! Traditions of belief in story and discourse in 1999 – and Bodies: Sex, Violence, Disease and Death in Contemporary Legend (2005) and have been described as "essential to the contemporary legend canon".
Traditions of Belief grew from Bennett's PhD research on contemporary ghost beliefs and examined the rhetorical strategies of the tellers. In Bennett's word, "to see whether ... [supernatural] beliefs would be expressed in narrative form".
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Gillian Bennett
Gillian Bennett (née Lawley; 25 September 1939 – 13 December 2023) was a British folklorist, known for her work on contemporary legends.
Bennett was born on 25 September 1939. She enrolled as a mature graduate student at the University of Sheffield in 1978, where she studied at the Centre for English Cultural Tradition and Language (CECTAL) under the supervision of J. D. A. Widdowson. She gained both masters and doctoral degrees, and would retain ties to CECTAL as an honorary research associate.
Bennett's PhD thesis was titled Aspects of supernatural belief, memorate and legend in a contemporary urban environment and "aimed to move away from the antiquarian bias of previous work on the folklore of the supernatural in order to shed light on present day attitudes and concepts".
In 1982, CECTAL hosted a conference on Contemporary Legend. This initiated a number of succeeding conferences on the topic, leading to the creation in 1988 of the International Society for Contemporary Legend Research (ISCLR).
Bennett was a founder member of ISCLR, as was Paul Smith, a fellow University of Sheffield graduate. In collaboration with Smith, Bennett edited four of the five-volume Perspectives on Contemporary Legend essay series (1984–1990), which were based on the Sheffield Contemporary Legend conferences. She also co-wrote with Smith Contemporary Legend: The First Five Years (1990), co-compiled Contemporary Legend: A Folklore Bibliography (1993), co-edited Contemporary Legend: A Reader (1996) and co-authored Urban Legends: A Collection of International Tall Tales and Terrors (2007).
ISCLR has been described as of great significance "not just to legend studies but to also to the fortunes of English folklore scholarship in general" and seen in the 1990s as "probably the most prominent evidence of England's re-emergence as a major contributor to world folklore scholarship".
Bennett's two major published works are Traditions of Belief: Women and the Supernatural (1987) – which was expanded into Alas, Poor Ghost! Traditions of belief in story and discourse in 1999 – and Bodies: Sex, Violence, Disease and Death in Contemporary Legend (2005) and have been described as "essential to the contemporary legend canon".
Traditions of Belief grew from Bennett's PhD research on contemporary ghost beliefs and examined the rhetorical strategies of the tellers. In Bennett's word, "to see whether ... [supernatural] beliefs would be expressed in narrative form".