
Invisible Worlds
Legendary and Digital Enchantments at Alderley Edge
Liverpool University Press
Will be published approx. on 9. October 2026
Book
Paperback/Softback
288 pages
978-1-80596-601-2 (ISBN)
Description
An Open Access edition will be available on the Liverpool University Press website on publication, thanks to funding from the Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC).
Invisible Worlds explores the legends of Alderley Edge, in NE Cheshire, in fiction, community response, and creative and digital remediations. The culmination of a major 5-year research project, this co-authored study brings together literary criticism, creative practice, and public and digital medievalism to present new trans-disciplinary approaches to the study of place, taking as a case study the entangled legends and environmental and human histories of this remarkable site. A red sandstone escarpment above a network of mines, Alderley Edge is home to the medievalist legend of the sleeping knights, who rest beneath the hill and will awaken at a time of crisis. This powerful piece of folklore has inspired a rich tapestry of legendary imaginings - literary, public, and personal - associated with Alderley Edge. The volume traces the historical and contemporary life of these legends, from medieval romance to Alan Garner, asking how emplaced, and palimpsestic, medievalism of this type might form the basis of a creative and scholarly public-facing intervention communicating the value of non-built heritage and even issuing a call for environmental conservation.
Invisible Worlds explores the legends of Alderley Edge, in NE Cheshire, in fiction, community response, and creative and digital remediations. The culmination of a major 5-year research project, this co-authored study brings together literary criticism, creative practice, and public and digital medievalism to present new trans-disciplinary approaches to the study of place, taking as a case study the entangled legends and environmental and human histories of this remarkable site. A red sandstone escarpment above a network of mines, Alderley Edge is home to the medievalist legend of the sleeping knights, who rest beneath the hill and will awaken at a time of crisis. This powerful piece of folklore has inspired a rich tapestry of legendary imaginings - literary, public, and personal - associated with Alderley Edge. The volume traces the historical and contemporary life of these legends, from medieval romance to Alan Garner, asking how emplaced, and palimpsestic, medievalism of this type might form the basis of a creative and scholarly public-facing intervention communicating the value of non-built heritage and even issuing a call for environmental conservation.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Liverpool
United Kingdom
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Illustrations
colour map; colour images
Dimensions
Height: 234 mm
Width: 156 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-80596-601-2 (9781805966012)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Victoria Flood is Professor of Medieval & Early Modern Literature at the University of Birmingham. She has published extensively on medieval legendary history, prophecy, and romance, and their postmedieval reception. Catherine A.M. Clarke is Professor and Director of the Centre for the History of People, Place and Community at the Institute of Historical Research, and is a Visiting Professor in English Literature at the University of Southampton. Andrew B.R. Elliott is an Independent Researcher, specialising in medievalism and its uses in modern culture. He has written on film, video games, TV and online culture.
Content
Introduction: Enchantment and Alderley Edge
Victoria Flood with Catherine A. M. Clarke
Part 1: The Legend and its Pasts
Victoria Flood
Chapter 1: Legendary Entanglements and Eerie Medievalisms
Chapter 2: Medieval and Modern Romance
Chapter 3: The Legend and Prophecy
Chapter 4: Sir Gawain and the Green Knight at Alderley Edge
Chapter 5: Magic on the Edge
Part 2: The Site-Specific
Catherine A. M. Clarke
Chapter 1: Beyond 'Sense of Place'
Chapter 2: Pre-modern Provocations: Re-Imagining Place and Interpretation
Chapter 3: Underground Imaginaries
Chapter 4: Authority and Authenticity: Creative Practice and the Site-Specific
Chapter 5: Magical Book-Map: Suspension of Disbelief and Enchantment as Academic Practice
Part 3: Crowd-Curated Histories of the Edge
Andrew B. R. Elliott
Chapter 1: Crowd-Curated History
Chapter 2: Reframing History
Conclusion: Medieval Ghosts and Digital Optimism
Victoria Flood
Appendix 1: Transcription of the Stanley Notebook, CALS, DSA 3752/1, pp. 66-67
Victoria Flood
Appendix 2: Selected Public Responses, 2021-23
Bibliography
Victoria Flood with Catherine A. M. Clarke
Part 1: The Legend and its Pasts
Victoria Flood
Chapter 1: Legendary Entanglements and Eerie Medievalisms
Chapter 2: Medieval and Modern Romance
Chapter 3: The Legend and Prophecy
Chapter 4: Sir Gawain and the Green Knight at Alderley Edge
Chapter 5: Magic on the Edge
Part 2: The Site-Specific
Catherine A. M. Clarke
Chapter 1: Beyond 'Sense of Place'
Chapter 2: Pre-modern Provocations: Re-Imagining Place and Interpretation
Chapter 3: Underground Imaginaries
Chapter 4: Authority and Authenticity: Creative Practice and the Site-Specific
Chapter 5: Magical Book-Map: Suspension of Disbelief and Enchantment as Academic Practice
Part 3: Crowd-Curated Histories of the Edge
Andrew B. R. Elliott
Chapter 1: Crowd-Curated History
Chapter 2: Reframing History
Conclusion: Medieval Ghosts and Digital Optimism
Victoria Flood
Appendix 1: Transcription of the Stanley Notebook, CALS, DSA 3752/1, pp. 66-67
Victoria Flood
Appendix 2: Selected Public Responses, 2021-23
Bibliography