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04-09-2003, 07:57 PM | #1 |
Haunting Spirit
Join Date: Feb 2003
Location: Tennessee
Posts: 54
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Critical Essays on Tolkien
I'm doing a project (I'll spare you the details), and I'm looking for different critical essays on Tolkien and his works (mostly LotR, but not necessarily exclusively). My focus is essays addressing (even if somewhat obliquely) Tolkien's importance, whether literary, social, historical--whatever. In other words, essays addressing why we continue to read him.
I'm familiar with the essays in Flieger's Splintered Light, Pearce's (ed) Tolkien: A Celebration, Birzer's Tolkien's Sanctifying Myth, and Lobdell's (ed) A Tolkien Compass. Just wondering if anyone knows of anything else out there I've overlooked that might be useful--and thought this topic might spark some convo regarding existing criticism. Sorry if this should have been attached to a pre-existing thread, but the angle seemed different enough to warrant its own. [img]smilies/smile.gif[/img] [ April 09, 2003: Message edited by: Carorëiel ]
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04-09-2003, 08:39 PM | #2 |
Late Istar
Join Date: Mar 2001
Posts: 2,224
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Flieger has another book also, called, I believe A Question of Time or something like that. Quite good. Also, I would recommend Shippey's Author of the Century. I know you said you mainly wanted LotR related stuff, but if you're looking for anything on Legendarium in a broader sense, I also recommend the collection of essays Tolkien's Legendarium, edited by Flieger and Hostetter.
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04-10-2003, 02:18 AM | #3 |
Illustrious Ulair
Join Date: Aug 2002
Location: In the home of lost causes, and forsaken beliefs, and unpopular names,and impossible loyalties
Posts: 4,240
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There're a couple - Proceedings of the 1992 Tolkien Conference http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/de tail/-/1887726047/qid=1049962393/sr=8-1/ref=sr_8_1/104-8443890-0341519?v=glance&s=books&n=507846
& JRR Tolkien & his Literary Reasonances http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0313308454/qid%3D1049 962474/sr%3D11-1/ref%3Dsr%5F11%5F1/104-8443890-0341519 You could also check out Celebrating Middle Earth http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg...glance&s=books [ April 10, 2003: Message edited by: davem ] |
04-10-2003, 09:15 AM | #4 |
Princess of Skwerlz
Join Date: Jan 2002
Location: where the Sea is eastwards (WtR: 6060 miles)
Posts: 7,500
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Here's a very interesting essay on the psychological elements in LotR: Tolkien: Archetype and Word .
Lengthy, not easy to get into at the beginning, and well worth reading!
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04-10-2003, 12:15 PM | #5 |
Stormdancer of Doom
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Esty, thank you, that was fabulous!!
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04-10-2003, 01:25 PM | #6 |
Princess of Skwerlz
Join Date: Jan 2002
Location: where the Sea is eastwards (WtR: 6060 miles)
Posts: 7,500
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Interestingly, it's been almost exactly one year since I first posted that link here on the site, starting a thread to discuss it: Tolkien and Psychology. Alas, the interest was not as great as I had hoped - perhaps the discussion will revive now?
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'Mercy!' cried Gandalf. 'If the giving of information is to be the cure of your inquisitiveness, I shall spend all the rest of my days in answering you. What more do you want to know?' 'The whole history of Middle-earth...' |
04-10-2003, 01:39 PM | #7 |
Stormdancer of Doom
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But my dear Esty, what percentage of B-D Tolkien fans will jump at a thread about "Psychology"? Title it "Dreams", or something... "Frodo and his encounters with Archetypes"...
"Tolkien, Psychology, and Archetypes" Okay, I'll go have a look. Yeah, add "Faerie" in there too... "Tolkien, Psychology, Faerie, and Archetypes" I think we'd all benefit from a discussion about archetypes, what they are, what they bring to a fairy tale, what they bring to a quest and an epic... The connectino between dream-world and Faerie is unmistakable, so one would think that Faerie would be dreamlike, and so somewhat archetypal. I guess. I'm certainly no expert-- but I really enjoy(ed/ing) David Day's book Tolkien's Ring because it waves at the other myths Tolkien may have drawn from or been influenced by. This seems like the place for LittleManPoet to jump in and say something about writing serious, original fantasy. I connect the two concepts, anyway. How does one create a mythos? Mythopoeia... Mythmaking. MacDonald did it. Building Eucatastrophes. How does one go about this? Sword-and-sorcery hold no real appeal for me. Mythmaking, on the other hand... [ April 10, 2003: Message edited by: mark12_30 ]
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04-10-2003, 03:46 PM | #8 |
Spirit of the Lonely Star
Join Date: Mar 2002
Posts: 5,133
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Helen and Esty,
I hate to cut into this great discussion, but just wanted to suggest one more title that looks at Tolkien from a slightly different vantage---Patrick Curry, Defending Middle-earth, Tolkien: Myth and Modernity. He says that LotR is a powerful statement about the central conflict of the modern world: the struggle of community, nature and spirit against the modern union of state-power, capital, and technology. You may or may not agree with him, but it's interesting reading. [ April 10, 2003: Message edited by: Child of the 7th Age ]
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04-10-2003, 03:59 PM | #9 |
Stormdancer of Doom
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Cutting in-- Little Andreth? Naw, c'mon. I was having a one-sided discussion anyway and I was probably off-topic already. (Nawww, not Gamba!!...) So tell us what it's about (I've hit my quota for books, and Shippey is next on the list anyway.) What struck you about it? Do tell...
[ April 10, 2003: Message edited by: mark12_30 ]
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...down to the water to see the elves dance and sing upon the midsummer's eve. |
04-10-2003, 09:05 PM | #10 |
Seeker of the Straight Path
Join Date: Jul 2000
Location: a hidden fastness in Big Valley nor cal
Posts: 1,680
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Thanks Esty, I dipped into the essay and loved it, I hope to give it a more careful reading and respond to your psych thread { and Hey! I would have posted on it if I had seen it. [img]smilies/smile.gif[/img] } but I do see what you mean.
I think the application of various psychologies to the Legendarium gets far to hard a rap. If it is 'truth', then of course any other method of discerning truth through Archetypal patterns will not only show resembnlances but also illuminate from a different angle. I would like to see him tackle the Silm! talk about archetypes! But his line about Gollum being Frodo's shadow is patently obvious, not that JRRT in any way designed it as such... I will save the rest for Esty's thread.
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