Australian Fairy Tale Society’s first ever storytelling concert!

You are invited to The Australian Fairy Tale Society their first-ever storytelling concert – Stories of Light and Love! Come along on February 22nd, 2024 at 7:30 AEDT on Zoom to celebrate 10 years of the AFTS. Hear stories of welcome firelight and new dawns. Tales of what happens when there’s no light in the deep dark wood… Where loves are found, lost, and muddled!

This 90-minute concert will be welcoming and inclusive of everyone, and better still – it’s free!

Poster advertising Australian Fairy Tale Society Stories of Light and Love, celebrating 10 years. 22 February 2024, on Zoom.

Fairy Tales to Come

The Australian Fairy Tale Society has launched many projects, events, and products, but the bones of what we do lie within the five fairy tales we explore in depth each year.  In the last ten years (due to a few twinned investigations) we have actually looked at closer to sixty stories.  For a long time we were content to look at what you might call the ‘Fairy Tale Greatest Hits’  – Hansel & Gretel, Cinderella, Jack & the Beanstalk and so on – but then in 2019 we tackled our first Australian fairy tale and from then on we have settled into a pattern of

One Grimms

One Australian

One well known European (Andersen, Perrault, Arabian Nights etc)

One obscure European

One non-European

which has pushed us to explore the folkloric and literary heritage of many cultures, and continue to re-evaluate what a fairy tale is, and how stories from around the world connect with us.  If you want to immerse yourself in the fruits of our research, you can find all the Bibliographies and Points to Ponder for those sixty stories in our Members Only section.

A book cover entitled Tales of Snugglepot and Cuddlepie has sketches of Australian animals in trees and features a framed picture of two infants with bare bottoms facing the viewer wearing gum nut hats and hunched over a gum leaf.

Without doubt, finding and researching the Australian fairy tales is the biggest challenge.  There aren’t that many, with the two periods of fruitfulness occurring right now, and in the 1870s to 1920s, when what the writers called fairy tales were usually fairy stories anyway, which have attracted very little scholarly interest until recent years.   And let’s not ignore the diprotodon in the room – the horrific Aboriginal misrepresentation, and simultaneous cultural appropriation, that is present in every story from that early period.  The hardest of all was the first story we looked at, ‘The Magic Gun’, while the most fun was Snugglepot and Cuddlepie, especially once we saw the sexual meanings underlying the character dynamics.

The final two fairy tales for this financial year include our Aussie tale (usually done over the summer when you should have more reading time) as a rare example of an original Australian fairy tale.  Published in 1999, just when Juliet Marillier and Sophie Masson (both now AFTS members) were beginning their internationally-acclaimed work in retelling fairy tales.   Winner of the Miles Franklin Award, so you know the writing will be beautiful, the big question will be –

is it really a fairy tale?

A book cover features a person under water. The title is Eucalyptus by Murray Bail.
Four fairies cling to the back of a naked running infant, trying to hold it back.

Our April fairy tale, ‘The Stolen Bairn and the Sidhe’, builds on our November ‘Elves’ investigation.  It is a Scottish or Irish story of a baby who is taken by the sidhe (faerie) into the underworld and the mother who goes after her child in a quest in the spirit of Orpheus and Eurydice, or Tam Lin. A perfect story to lead up to Mothers’ Day.

Our 2024- 2025 financial year starts in June with another five stories.  This year the theme emerges as rather beastly, in contrast to all the brothers, sisters, mothers and fathers we’ve dealt with over the last year.

‘The Ebony Horse’ (Arabian Nights) is a grand adventure, starting with a sultan so obsessed with gadgets that he is lured into handing over his daughter in exchange for a mechanical, flying horse. His son objects, takes the horse, and is swept away to another land and another princess in need.  (Aladdin is the only other Arabian Nights story we’ve done so far.)

In contrast, we have the Russian story of ‘The Little Humpbacked Horse’ where Ivan the foolish grants freedom to a remarkable horse and wins instead the little humpbacked horse who helps him face the three impossible tasks set by the Tsar.  This is our third Russian story (‘Vasilisa the Fair’, and ‘Tsarevitch Ivan, the Firebird, and the Grey Wolf’) and was made especially popular in Russia by a Pepita ballet.

These are the stories we’ll be exploring leading up to Horses’ Birthday on 1 August.

On a boulder by the sea stand a man in a long-sleeved cloak speaking to a woman in a long dress holding an umbrella with her dress waving in the wind.

In September, we have the great Chinese love story (one of the Four Great Chinese Folktales) of ‘Lady White Snake’ where a mortal man and a snake spirit in the form of a beautiful woman, confront life, death, transformation, jealousy, and pills of immortality, so that they can be together.

Snakes again in November (I told you it was a beastly year) with the Grimms’ story of ‘Three Snake Leaves’.  As soon as the princess makes a condition of marriage that if she dies, her new husband must be buried with her, you know that marriage isn’t going to equal Happily Ever After for these two.  For a while it seems as if this is going to be another tale of deathless love, but a sea journey brings another threat to life, true love, and immortality.   Will this be a good Halloween story?

A man in a turban holds the hand and kisses the ear of a woman facing away from him. Candles burn side the couple who are drawn in an oval frame.
By a body of water, an enormous creature with a dog-like head holds a screaming naked man in his jaws.

As the Keynote Speaker at our 2016 conference, Into the Bush: Its Beauty and Its Terror, Jackie Kerin led us through many paths following the many traces of the bunyip in the overlapping cultures of our land…and so, at long last, we look at the very simple story of ‘The Bunyip’ as it appears in Andrew (and Nora) Lang’s Brown Fairy Book, as a starting point for all this creature has come to represent.

The tale of ‘Kovlad: The Lost Child’, our first-ever Slavic story (though they are closely related to Russian fairy tales), starts with a much-longed-for child, a taboo that is (of course) broken, and the haunting that follows.  Don’t worry!  There are three sisters who will try to break
the curse.

Our final story of ‘The Glass Coffin’ by the Grimms might
recall Snow White and Sleeping Beauty, with a beautiful maiden waiting to be liberated from her coffin by love (a gender flip of ‘The Lost Child’), but this one also features a poor tailor lured down into the depths, and a battle
between a stag and a boar. 

In a decorated rectangular frame, A man in a turban stands commandingly over a seated woman. The man is pointing at pots on a table and the woman clutches her chest defensively.
A poster entitled The Glass Coffin shows a coffin encased in chains beside plants.

With every story we investigate we learn more about the language of fairy tales, the meanings that are built into their imagery, and the relationship between written and oral tales around the world.  May this coming year bring you ever more stories to appreciate, understand, and be inspired by.

Happy 10th birthday AFTS!

Once Upon a Time…

(in June 2013 to be exact) I posted on my FaceBook page about a workshop I had just delivered at the English Teachers Association conference in Brisbane about adapting fairy tales into Australian stories, and Reilly McCarron, (also an Accredited Storyteller with the NSW Storytelling Guild) wrote back so enthusiastically that within a few sentences we were agreeing that what we both wanted was an Australian Fairy Tale Society – and since it didn’t exist, it was up to us to start it.

This happened at an extraordinarily fruitful time in Reilly’s life.  She was enriching her work as a professional Storyteller, by playing her harp and singing,

A woman with long hair plays a harp and sings.
Photo courtesy Jackie Kerin

was in the middle of doing her folklore qualification through the Open University, and now she was ready to create a new Society.    But when we met at the Royal Botanic Garden Sydney in August I discovered her fruitfulness had extended to creating a small human – another claim on her time.  But we didn’t stop. We both just continued to give our all alongside all the other things in our lives.

Our first step was to create a FaceBook page – and our first surprise was how popular it was. 

We realised we were riding the zeitgeist.  The AFTS came into being at exactly the time people wanted it to exist.  2012 had seen international excitement over the bicentenary of the Grimms’ first edition of Kinder-und Hausmärchen Children’s and Household Tales.  Dr Rebecca-Anne Do Rozario, Dr Belinda Calderone, and Catherine Snell had been running Monash Fairy Tale Salon symposiums since 2012. (Belinda and Catherine later became Presidents of the AFTS, as did Louisa John Krol, who was also heavily involved with the Salons.)

9 people dressed in fun casual clothes, 2 with floral headdresses, face the camera sitting around a statue of 3 red-capped mushrooms.
Photo courtesy Jackie Kerin

Front L-R: Belinda Calderone, Dr Danielle Wood 

Centre: Roslyn Quin, Jackie Kerin, Louisa John-Krol, Suzann Sandow

Back: Toby Eccles, Anna McCormack

https://storytellingguildvic.blogspot.com/2014/07/transporting-tales-fairy-tale-symposium.html

Sarah Gibson had created her multi-media platform, Re-Enchantment, and Kate Forsyth, Sophie Masson, and Juliet Marillier were writing fairy tale re-tellings that remain international bestsellers.  People were keen to find out more.

I honestly can’t remember whether we wanted to establish AFTS as a business in order to hold conferences, or whether we needed to hold a conference in order to get the Society started.

2014 AFTS conference

But they both involved a lot of building-the-plane-while-we-were-flying-it, obtaining advice from the Department of Fair Trading and Beyond Bank, so that in October 2013 we got our ABN and Registered Business Name – and thus, the Australian Fairy Tale Society was officially born ten years ago this month.

Money challenges were huge – it took two years before the Society could pay me back the money I had advanced – and that was even with the support of our forty-two Founding Members who paid membership fees twice within twelve months, and the Pozible crowd funding project that Reilly organised, using her own website for the AFTS until we could start our own. 

Regan Kubecek contributed her artwork to the Pozible campaign

In a circle framed with twigs and branches sits a cottage with trees behind it and a path it its front door. There are flowers in its garden and its windows are lit.

and created our beautiful logo which gave our Society our signature colours of blue, green, gold, and red.

AFTS logo

By early 2014 we had attracted some ‘star’ members – Kate Forsyth, Sophie Masson, Jack Zipes, Maria Tatar – as well as Members interested in being on the Committee, which was absolutely essential to the Society continuing to thrive.

And finally it all came together on the June long weekend 2014 when he had our Inaugural Conference in Paddington Uniting Church in Sydney – and at last we could meet each other.

And that was the real beginning of us becoming a community.

In front of a stone wall with a stone archway and a large wooden lectern, sit 5 people in casual clothing with microphones in front of them.
Photo courtesy Jackie Kerin

Jenni Cargill Strong, Thang D Luong, Kate Forsyth, Rebecca Anne DoRozario, Jackie Kerin.

9 June 2014

Video courtesy Jackie Kerin

Jo Henwood

2023 AFTS Award Winner!

The Australian Fairy Tale Society is thrilled to announce that the winner of the 2023 AFTS Award for outstanding contributions to the field of fairy tales in Australia is Shirley Way.

Shirley Way has contributed immensely to the fairy tale community in so many ways over so many years – as former eZine editor, initiator of the podcast series (to be found on the AFTS youtube channel), member of the Brisbane Fairy Tale Ring, hardworking, skilled, and insightful Committee member, co-organiser of the AFTS conferences in 2020 and 2023, as well as captain of the hugely successful 2022 conference in Brisbane.

Congratulations Shirley!

Against a stained glass background which is part of the award, is a framed image of Shirley Way facing left, smiling, with honey coloured wavy hair.

Shirley’s co-nominees were:

Sophie Masson
www.sophiemassonauthor.com

This year, Sophie – with previous winner Lorena Carrington – launched a small indie publishing company, Pardalote Press, to get their magical stories and artworks out into the world.

Sophie’s book ‘French Fairy Tales’, which is illustrated by Lorena, inspired musician/composer Reilly McCarron to produce a CD, ‘Il était une fois’ (Once upon a time). And these three AFTS members are part of our anthology, ‘South of the Sun: Australian fairy tales for the 21st century’.

Sophie’s tales and passion for fairy tales have inspired art, music and readers around the world. Her body of work includes ‘French Fairy Tales’, ‘Satin’, ‘The Crystal Heart’, ‘Scarlet in the Snow’, ‘Moonlight and Ashes’, ‘The Firebird’, and ‘Hunter’s Moon’.

Spike Deane
www.spikedeane.com

An award-winning mixed media artist, specialising in cast glass, Spike draws much of her inspiration from fairy tales, folklore and mythology. Her prolific contributions to Australian fairy tale culture span from the old forests of Europe to engaging with chatbot, and an array of beautiful art in between.

Spike has volunteered her time, energy and skills as the AFTSeZine graphics editor since 2016.

Against a stained glass background, being part of the award, are three headshots labelled Sophie Masson, Spike Deane, and Shirley Way. The title is The 2023 AFTS Annual Award for inspiration and contribution to Australian Fairy Tale Culture nominees are and there is a crowned frog on a tree branch in an oval in the top left corner, being the logo of the Australian Fairy Tale Society.

Key dates for 2023 AFTS Award and Bursary

2023 AFTS Award for Inspiration and Contribution to Australian Fairy Tale Culture

  • Nominate your candidate from April 24 to May 7.
  • The winner will be decided by popular vote between May 8 and May 15.
  • Nominees need not be an AFTS member, however nominators and voters must be current AFTS members.

At the 2023 Sydney Conference, we will again honour, by popular choice the person who has most inspired and contributed to Australian fairy tale culture.

To date, we’ve recognised the very different achievements of Belinda Calderone (2017), Dr Kate Forsyth (2018), Dr Robyn Floyd (2019), Lorena Carrington (2020), Louisa-John Krol (2021) and Jo Henwood (2022). Their names are engraved in our permanent Award, created by Spike Deane.

For 2023, we’re asking for your nominations, from which the finalists will be selected based on their body of work. This will have enduring significance due to its a) originality, b) influence, c) beauty or quality, d) depth of insight and breadth of scope, e) contribution to understanding of Australian fairy tales.

More details about the Award, and previous winners and finalists are here.

2023 Bursary – travel to the NSW conference!

  • The AFTS Executive will make a decision by May 14, 2023, from applications received between April 24 and May 8.

One AFTS bursary is on offer to a current member, who needs assistance to attend our Sydney conference. The bursary will cover a) transport and accommodation costs to $400, and b) a ‘fairy godmother/father’ as conference mentor.

Please note that the bursary holder is responsible for their own registration cost as detailed here. All best. We look forward to seeing you in Sydney!

CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS, 2023 AFTS Conference

EXTENDED TO 11 MARCH!

Our 2023 conference will be a live event, in Sydney on the weekend of the 24th and 25th June.

We are calling for any and all submissions relating to an Australian interpretation of a fairy tale. Submissions may be sent, by 11pm AEDT, March 11, by using the form via the bit.ly address in the poster.

EDIT: Submissions have now closed. We anticipate releasing the program and registration details in early April.

A poster with a stone wall background subtitled Power with prompts about Power in fairy tales
A poster with a stone wall background with further discussion of Power and new discussion of Place in fairy tales. Images of a witch on a stool, a steaming cauldron, and two fairy tale monsters.
A poster showing a cottage and part of a witch, describing the Australian Fairy Tale Society's aims and inviting proposals for their 2023 conference.
A poster with a stone wall background with subtitle: We Are Looking For and exampls of conference activities, illustrated with a fairy tale monster and a fairy tale castle.
A poster with a stone wall background subtitled Submissions saying submissions are due 28 February 2023, illustrated with a fairy tale monster, a steaming cauldron and a fairy tale cottage..
A poster with a stone wall background subtitled What Happens Next illustrated with fairy tale monstesr and a steaming cauldron.

Voting closing for the 2022 AFTS Award

Don’t let Friday August 26, at 11.45pm whoosh by!

It’s a deadline for two very important decisions.

Poster showing pictures of 3 nominees for the 2022 AFTS Annual Award for Inspiration and Contribution to Australian Fairy Tale Culture: Sophie Masson, Spike Deane, Jo Henwood.
2022 AFTS Award nominees: Sophie Masson, Spike Deane, Jo Henwood

Sophie Masson, Spike Deane and Jo Henwood are our shortlisted nominees for the 2022 AFTS Award for Inspiration and Contribution to Australian Fairy Tale Culture.

Members only decide the winner, so please click here to vote: https://australianfairytalesociety.org/afts-award/2022-award/

The Award will be presented on October 1 at our Brisbane conference: ‘Australian Fairy Tales: Flesh or Fossil?’

To be in the room for this magical moment (and for the excellent program on offer), you are welcome to apply for the AFTS Bursary.  

AFTS Bursary – travel to the Queensland conference

A 2-engine passenger jet with Jetstar logos flies up into a bright blue sky.

The selected Bursary holder will need to be a current member and pay their own registration cost, and will receive support for –

a) transport up to $200,

b) accommodation up to $100/night for two (2) nights, and

c) a ‘fairy godmother/father’ as conference mentor.

As the Executive anticipate a decision by September 2, now is the time to vote – and hopefully secure your spot in Brisbane: https://australianfairytalesociety.org/2022-brisbane-conference/

AFTS Conference accommodation and transport

And while you’re here! A word about Brisbane accommodation and transport.

(PS. Monday Oct 3 is a public holiday for Queen’s Birthday)

If coming from interstate, accommodation ($ to $$$) is available in/around the CBD, Woolloongabba, South Brisbane, South Bank precinct areas. (Perhaps consider a room share if coming with friend/s.)

We recommend somewhere close(-ish) to the Ship Inn (opp. Qld Maritime Museum) so that you can walk, train or bus to the conference.

Options are easily searched with the aid of Google maps and booking engines like Wotif.com, Booking.com, and car clubs like RACQ, NRMA.

Those flying into Brisbane can travel direct by Airtrain to South Bank and South Brisbane stations.

• Airtrain tickets can be pre-booked online: https://www.airtrain.com.au/ and here: https://translink.com.au/travel-with-us/airport-services

• Translink (for public transport): https://translink.com.au/ (There is an app you can download.)

Please note: Paper tickets and ‘Go Cards’ can be used on public transport. Translink will also trial a ‘smart ticketing’ system (i.e. using a credit card, or smart phone.) For updates, visit Translink online.

A flying fairy reaches down to a fern and part of an ancient fossil shows beside a fern on the other side of the poster. The text reads Australian Fairy Tales: Flesh or Fossil? South Bank Brisbane, 1-2 October 2022.

Keen to come? We’d love to see you!

Registrations close (absolutely) on September 18, due to catering requirements.

Details and updates here: https://australianfairytalesociety.org/2022-brisbane-conference/

Yours in fairy tales,

The Brisbane Crew – Alex, Bettina, June, Kathryn, Shirley

Look what’s happening in Victoria!

The Victorian Fairy Tale Ring has forthcoming events, to which you are all invited.

1. 28 May 2022 2pm: Our free fairytale event at the quaint & historic Athenaeum Library, 188 Collins St, Melbourne.

Logo of the Melbourne Atheneum Library with building silhouette and subtext The Pleasure of Words beside an image of a pile of books in front of 4 women in front of filled bookshelves.

Add some much-needed magic to your life!

Why are fairy tales still so fascinating? What is a fairy tale? Are there Australian fairy tales? Come to the Athenaeum Library at 2pm on Saturday 28 May 2022 to hear Carmel Bird and the other writers and illustrators of South of the Sun – Australian Fairy Tales for the 21st Century discuss this and other questions.

South of the Sun is an enchanting, illustrated book of fairy tales, but not the kind you read to children at bedtime. They are strictly for the grown-ups. There are dark stories where things don’t end happily ever after, tales to make you laugh out loud, stories of sweet revenge and scenes of sheer delight in the world of magic and the fey.  

There will be magical music, readings, book sales and free refreshments, too!

Bookings essential. Contact library@melbourneathenaeum.org.au or phone 9650 3100.

2.  23-30 June 2022 Bendigo Library: Winter Solstice Celebration: Love of the Fey.

Modern building lit up by old fashioned street light and other glowing lights.

A week-long exhibition of Lorena Carrington’s illustrations bumps in on Thurs June 23rd and will culminate in two sessions of Louisa John-Krol’s storytelling and music on June 30th.

June 30th includes guests for South of the Sun readings, informal author chat, face-painting, costume prizes, signings & sales. 

  •          The 2pm session will probably be for ages 8 – 12, by library’s request, and
  •          The 5.30pm session is for grown-ups with dress-up theme, which is likely to have gothic, psychedelic, steampunk, pre-Raphaelite, cross-dressing and other flamboyant elements. All genders welcome.

2022 Conference – Call for Presentations

AUSTRALIAN FAIRY TALES: FLESH OR FOSSIL?

October 1-2, 2022 at Brisbane’s South Bank precinct

The Australian Fairy Tale Society investigates and creates fairy tales from an Australian perspective. Local Fairy Tale Rings gather in person and via Zoom to explore specific fairy tales. We have mined rich themes at previous conferences, and celebrate members’ talents through our eZine and a new anthology, ‘South of the Sun: Australian Fairy Tales for the 21st Century’.

Invitation

As always our focus is on the Australian interpretation of fairy tales, particularly contemporary multicultural, diverse Australia. As AFTS Conference-goers delight in diversity, we are looking for –

  • Talks of no more than 25 minutes, including Q&A
  • Case studies of projects, with a fairy tale basis
  • Performances of no more than 10 minutes, with an option for 5 minutes’ Q&A
  • Panel discussions of no more than 25 minutes, including Q&A
  • Stalls to sell your merchandise.

Feel free to contact us with a new idea. We want to celebrate your creativity not stifle it!

Proposals

By midnight May 6, 2022, please submit your proposal using the online form. This will include –

  • Name/s
  • Email address and phone
  • Bio (max 150 words)
  • Type of presentation (as above)
  • Title / Topic, plus a 100-200 word description
  • Your experience in delivering this material or something similar
  • Resources … a) that you will provide, b) that the AFTS needs to supply.

What happens next

If your presentation is accepted for the conference, we will ask you to provide –

  • A colour photograph in high resolution, preferably a close-up of your face, for the program
  • A two-paragraph introduction which can be used by the MC
  • Permission to video-record your presentation for later access by AFTS members. (This will be subject to grant funding.)
  • Permission to use the material you have given us, including your photograph, in any conference promotions. If this includes media interviews, we will discuss this with you first.
  • Permission to use elements from your presentation (e.g. photos, summaries, links to your publications) in future AFTS publications, such as the eZine. We will discuss these needs as they arise.

We intend to respond to your submissions by the end of June, in order to announce the program in July 2022.

Benefits

  • The joy of sharing your fairy tale passion with like-minded enthusiasts.
  • A discount to the conference, and a gift of an annual membership. You will need to complete forms for both of these.

Want updates?

Sign up to receive the latest 2022 Conference news. (This feature is coming soon.)

Website graphic design

Devahuti Rai Chaliha sits on a sofa smiling and holding a mug. Behind her is an Indian statue.
Devahuti Rai Chaliha, “Debs”

Sharp-eyed visitors will have seen our beautiful new header, and gallery images on the Activities and Shop pages linking us to where we want to go.

Who is responsible for these beautiful images? Devahuti Rai Chaliha, PhD student by day, AFTS volunteer by night.

Thank you, Debs!