Daily schedule
Sunday 20 July - Saturday 26 July 2025
On most weekday mornings you will enjoy small group seminars (broken up with a short break), followed by a plenary lecture before lunch.
Afternoons are then free to explore the many places of interest in and around Oxford or participate in the programme's optional social activities, including an optional field trip on Wednesday afternoon.
The course fee includes breakfasts Monday-Saturday (residential guests only), four weekday self-servce lunches, two self-service dinners and four served dinners Sunday-Friday. On one evening, you will also receive an invitation to join the programme director and tutors on high table (formal dress is encouraged). All meals included are taken in Brasenose College's dining hall.
On Friday, there will be a special gala farwell dinner and reception, where Certificates of Attendance will be presented. For this special occasion formal dress is encouraged.
Social programme
Inspiring Oxford warmly invites all participants take part in our social programme, with all events provided at no additional cost. Optional social activites may include walking tours, concerts, croquet, theatre shows and punting.
A list of optional social activites available during this course will be sent out to you in advance of the start date.
Seminars
Details of all seminars are listed below.
A plenary lecture will also take place after morning seminars and the lecture programme for 2025 can be viewed online here.
Monday: Not just ‘Once Upon A Time’
We shall begin the course by investigating what defines a folktale and why they are such a source of interest and inspiration for collectors and writers. We will also explore the crossover between folktale fantasy and historical belief systems across cultures. We will discuss our own experiences of lived folklore and superstitions and how we can use this as a starting-point for developing original folktale narratives
Tuesday: Who Tells The Tale?
We shall look at a range of folktale collectors and writers from the 17th century to the present day, and examine how tales were revisited and retold within specific historic and cultural contexts. In so doing, we shall be focusing on the tropes of romanticisation, the morality tale and subversion. You will also have the opportunity to begin the process of rewriting a traditional story according to your own personal interests.
Wednesday: The People and Their Tales
Today we look at how folktales have been categorized by collectors and analysts. Specifically, focusing on the concept of character archetypes and tale types as a way of exploring the relationship between character and plot. We will investigate how folktales reflect human experience within the frameworks of the Cautionary Tale and the Hero’s Journey. You will have the opportunity to develop your own original folktales in this context.
Thursday: The Landscape of The Tales
We will look at the relationship between Folktales and place, and how story types repeat across landscapes. We will be focusing on the characters of the Sleeping Hero and the Greenwitch within this context. We will also look at how folktale motifs can be connected to archaeological finds, specifically to ritual objects. You will have the opportunity to develop your own original folktales, rooted in either a known or imagined landscape.
Friday: Tales of Our Time
We will explore the resurgence of folktale and folklore over the last 20 years, across novels, film and popular culture. We will examine how motifs and tale types have been subverted and restructured whilst still retaining a sense of their original power and purpose. We shall end by discussing why these old stories matter now, and how they might be carried forward into the future.