Based Camp | Simone & Malcolm Collins

We Stopped Fearing Swamp Hags & Society Collapsed (A Historic Anthropology)

Feb 12, 2026
They dig into the ancient “swamp hag” archetype found across Europe and Eurasia. They trace how folklore labeled liminal, disruptive women as warnings about social and biological risks. They connect those myths to modern figures like viral protesters, “Karens,” and shifts in witch portrayals. They debate how loosening community boundaries changed who gains influence and why that matters today.
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ANECDOTE

Personal Story: A Mother 'Made For Another Time'

  • Simone shares her mother struggled as an empty-nester and felt 'made for another time'.
  • She uses this to illustrate people who would have thrived in premodern, localized roles.
INSIGHT

Folklore Encodes Social Risk Signals

  • Societies used swamp-hag myths to signal and preempt dangerous, unmoored individuals who could harm the group.
  • Malcolm argues physiognomy and correlated traits made marginal figures predictable threats worth isolating.
INSIGHT

Hags Mixed Threat And Utility

  • European hag/crone figures combined danger and limited utility as healers or midwives in a single archetype.
  • Simone stresses that the archetype taught where such liminal women belonged in community structure.
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