
The History of Mermaids,
Sea Spirits & Women
Why do mermaids continue to enchant us? Dive beneath the surface to explore centuries of myth, art, and transformation with leading experts in folklore and the history of monsters.
A Journey Through Time & Tide
Ancient Origins
From sirens of antiquity to medieval Melusine, explore the earliest tales of sea-spirits across cultures.
Literary Legends
Journey from Hans Christian Andersen's haunting tale to Disney's transformation and beyond.
Modern Meanings
Discover 21st-century reimaginings - from colonial critique to queer and transgender symbolism.
Why do mermaids continue to enchant us? From ancient sea-spirits to Disney princesses, the mermaid has drifted through centuries of myth, art, and pop culture - shifting shape with our fears and desires.
In this talk, we dive beneath the surface of the familiar tale to explore the deeper history of mermaid lore. We'll begin with Hans Christian Andersen's The Little Mermaid and its Disney transformations, then swim back through time to meet her many watery sisters: the sirens of antiquity, medieval Melusine, selkies, rusalki, Mami Wata, and the curious "mermaids" sailors swore they saw at sea.
Join our expert speakers in unraveling what mermaids reveal about how societies imagine women, bodies, and outsiders. Together we'll explore the mermaid and her relationship to the way women are defined and ponder the opposition between the mermaid and the sailor.
Lastly, we'll look at 21st-century reimaginings that show why the mermaid's spell endures - from powerful critiques of colonialism to symbols of queer and transgender identity.
What You'll Discover
Greek Sirens
The dangerous singers of ancient mythology
Celtic Selkies
Shape-shifting seal-women of Scottish lore
Mami Wata
West African water spirits and their legacy
Modern Icons
Queer, trans, and postcolonial reimaginings
Talks on Sale Now
Join us for this enchanting exploration
Meet the Speakers
Leading experts in folklore, mythology, and monster studies
Professor Diane Purkiss
Historian, Author & Folklorist
Professor Diane Purkiss is a leading authority on folklore, mythology, and the cultural history of magic and belief. Based at the University of Oxford, her research explores how stories shape our understanding of gender, power, and identity across the centuries.
Dr. Natalie Lawrence
Historian of Science & Monster Expert
Dr. Natalie Lawrence is a historian of science and author of Enchanted Creatures: Our Monsters and Their Meanings (W&N, 2024; Pegasus 2025), a history of monsters and our imaginations over the last 15,000 years.
She has a first class in Natural Sciences, a Masters and a PhD in History and Philosophy of Science from the University of Cambridge. She also co-authored Planta Sapiens: The New Science of Plant Intelligence with Professor Paco Calvo (Little Brown, 2022; Norton 2023; 10 translations so far).
She has spoken for TEDX, numerous radio channels and podcasts, and presented for Cambridge Science Festival, Geist Talks, and Last Tuesday Society, amongst others.
