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09-05-2007, 05:26 AM | #1 |
Haunting Spirit
Join Date: Sep 2007
Posts: 95
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David Brin's criticisms
Hey Tolkien fans I was reading David Brin's critique on The Lord of the Rings recently and I have been having what one might call a 'crisis of faith'. It seems to me that Tolkien himself was torn between different interpretations of his own story, though Brin seems to say that ultimately it the disastrous, 'genocidal' romantic view that held sway. Can we really catagorise Tolkien's work like that, and can Brin allagorise it to the degree that he says that Tolkien's "good" side are not really good but only fighting selfishly for the preservation of the "old world" (ie agrarian etc) and that "evil" is simply a word used by the "victors" who win the War of the Ring to label Sauron's army which is the only that is composed of "all the races in middle-earth" (does he think there's Avari or something in Sauron's forces). Brin casts Sauron in the light of rebeller against the old world, against the uber-elves, against the evil Gondorians. Can this really be the case. If I look at LOTR in that light I cannot, sorry, cannot enjoy it any more. As such I don't want to look at it in that light but Brin's argument is peruasive. The way I take it, The end of the War of the Ring is no agrarian, back to old ways affair. It is a time of change, and by no means does the defeat of Sauron mean the 'defeat' of machines. Rather I take Sauron's defeat as being the defeat of an evil,an evil which is defined in Lord of the Rings, and which Brin fails to grasp.Sauron, ultimately, is no one's ally; indeed if he were victorious he would have consumed even the universe perhaps. Brin would say- "that's from the victor's point of view', to which I say-"no, its the reality. Indeed, The victors 'wrote' the Red Book, but nonetheless, was Sauron victorious no Easterling or Southron wouldh've been any better off. Ultimately, the society that does win through the War of the Ring is an imperfect, indeed hierarchical one. But by no means does Tolkien envisage a return to such. There is enough evidence in his own writing that such an 'elitist' society is as terrible as any other (Numenor). Though there is elation with the victory of Gondor, and though it is not demcratic, it is, ultimately, better than Sauron's dominion. Brin is right to suggest that there are instances in which Tolkien appears to critique his own writing and challenge his own ideas. However, Brin does not extrapolate on this and instead his article pushes his agenda. The Lord of the Rings should not be taken to either extreme, for there are many contradictions and paradoxes within tolkien' s own thought that make for a complex, and therefor very real-like, universe. Thoughts on Brin and his critique? here's the article: www.davidbrin.com/tolkienarticle1.html |
09-05-2007, 10:25 AM | #2 |
Itinerant Songster
Join Date: Jan 2002
Location: The Edge of Faerie
Posts: 7,066
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No time to read the article right now, but on the face of it, it seems that Brin is criticizing Tolkien's LotR for being northwestern European and Anglo-Saxon. Oh to be a Brit basher, especially when one is a Brit! Something perversely pleasurable about it, I'm sure.
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09-05-2007, 10:46 AM | #3 |
Wight
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: England, UK
Posts: 178
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Note: if you are American please don't take any offense; this is not an anti-American rant, just my own take on his work.
Looking at Brin's biography I was unsurprised to see that he was American and I think this explains a lot of why he does not 'get' Tolkien's themes. He criticises the 'romantic' ideal of a past golden age. The problem with his writing is that he doesn't have the right perspective. Tolkien was British and writing for a British audience (it was only later that the book became the international favourite it is today). Thus his work reflected a British outlook and British opinions. The thing is that America has never really had a past 'golden age' - despite some bumps on the road (the Depression, Vietnam, 9/11, etc.) America's history has virtually been uphill ever since they gained their independence and became a nation. Throughout the 19th Century, the US was expanding across North America, and in the 20th Century they became the world's richest country, with only some small involvement in WWI experiencing little of WWII's negative effects. Britain also did well in the 19th Century, becoming the world's dominant power and enjoying great wealth and advanced culture. In the 20th Century, on the other hand, Britain had a pretty hard time of it. Millions of young men were mindlessly slaughtered in one of the most horrific conflicts in history (WWI) and after WWII the country was shattered, both financially and spiritually. The British Empire was crumbling and the country became increasingly little more than anywhere else that had experienced the war, with a bleak, dull future. The glory days of the Victorian era semed like a dream to many people after that. For the people of Britain in the forties and the fifties the 'golden age' was very real, and now out of reach. And I think that comes through in Tolkien's writings. Arda was once a world of beauty, light and perfection (essentially the Victorian era). But by the time of his story (LOTR, written in the fifties) the world has become a decaying, desolate place, scarred by the ruin of war. Places of happiness like Lothlorien and Rivendell still remain - but they are really just what has survived - they are from a past age, a glimpse of a bygone era. The heroes are not trying to create a better future, they are trying to save what is left of the past. The 'future' appears to be the smoke and cruelty of Mordor and the Orcs. Much of what happens in LOTR and its ending are perhaps Tolkien's own fantasy - that the depressed British would find the strength within themselves to overcome the bleak future prepared for them and to return to the 'golden age' of the Victorian era. And I think this was a sentiment shared in much of Britain. But America never went through this stage of post-war depression (heck it's been over a century since a war was even fought in North America), or at least not in the way that Britain did. So it's not all that surprising that Brin, as an American, finds Tolkien's ideals strange. And in some ways he's right - constantly looking back on the past and trying to recreate it is not a good way to live. But he's not British and so I think this affects his outlook somewhat. Of course, Britain eventually got past this bleak stage and (mostly) recovered from the war, but sadly Tolkien died before he could see it happen. I often wonder if his works might have been different if they had been written in the 70s-90s rather than the 40s-50s. Perhaps we might have gotten a different message altogether. Anyway, that's just my opinion from what I've gathered on Tolkien as a person. What does everyone else think?
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09-06-2007, 05:52 AM | #4 | |||||||||||||
Eagle of the Star
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Sarmisegethuza
Posts: 1,058
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"May the wicked become good. May the good obtain peace. May the peaceful be freed from bonds. May the freed set others free." |
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09-06-2007, 03:55 PM | #5 | ||||
Laconic Loreman
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After reading Raynor's post, I wasn't expecting too much 'Enlightment' (yes that's an intended pun) from this guy. So I kind of skimmed through the article a bit, to get a few chuckles...
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And that is all I really cared to read. I wouldn't put too much stock into this Doctor tumhalad.
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Fenris Penguin
Last edited by Boromir88; 09-06-2007 at 06:21 PM. |
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09-06-2007, 05:06 PM | #6 |
Haunting Spirit
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: In a flower
Posts: 97
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I must have a different version of the books, either that or Brin just likes the bad boys to win.
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09-06-2007, 07:01 PM | #7 |
Late Istar
Join Date: Mar 2001
Posts: 2,224
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Wow - I've seen some reasonable critiques of Tolkien, but Brin's essay is surprisingly muddled and imperceptive. I seem to remember an equally brainless tirade against Star Wars from him. Has anyone read actually read anything by him? Is his fiction any good or is it as uninspired as this?
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