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04-23-2003, 10:11 PM | #1 |
Wight
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Was Middle Earth Created or Discovered?
The following is the intro to my IB Extended Essay:
J.R.R. Tolkien has characterized fantasy as “the making or glimpsing of Other-worlds.” (Fuller, The Lord of the Hobbits: J.R.R. Tolkien). His achievement is astounding—-not as a maker, but as a discoverer. His world of Middle-Earth was not a mere creation.Instead, the fantastic realm was discovered and brought to life through the archetypical quest exploited in The Lord of the Rings. The issues that arose in the epic trilogy mirror Tolkien’s own passion, concern, and opinion for the issues prevalent during his time; questions which the human race will continually be confronted with as long as the world remains in existence. Themes such as life and death, love, war, heroism, and good versus evil touch on many different levels of the human psyche because they are thus insightfully realistic. The chief appeal of The Lord of the Rings lies in its causal and omnipresent construction of the basic struggles of mankind—-matters already inherently present in the world, but pieced together, or “discovered” by Tolkien in a creative new light. I hope that made sense, since that definitely wasn't one of my top-notch writing samples (much revision needs to be done on my part). Maybe i'll post more of my 3000-4000 word essay when it's complete, but I'm interested in knowing your thoughts. Created or discovered, and why? [ April 24, 2003: Message edited by: Jessica Jade ]
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04-23-2003, 11:00 PM | #2 |
Ghost Prince of Cardolan
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It sort of depends on what level we're talking about here.
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04-24-2003, 12:22 AM | #3 |
Delver in the Deep
Join Date: Dec 2002
Location: Aotearoa
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I'm not too sure about the terminology you're using... I think that Middle-Earth was created by JRR Tolkien, and not discovered by Bilbo Baggins. But that's just me.
I definitely know what you're getting at though, when comparing JRR Tolkien with other fantasy or science fiction, and also with real myths and legends. The Lord of the Rings might take place in another world, but the story concentrates on what happens within this world. We discover Middle-Earth through the eyes of the hobbits, and not through the voice of a narrator (even in The Hobbit, the narrator concentrates more on characters than locations). Almost without exception, other sci-fi/fantasy works make up a fantastic world that is so different from our own, it needs to be explained at great (sometimes exhausting) length. The authors are too busy saying something like, "Wow! Look at this - talking dragons!" or "Flat world - how fun!", that the story usually ends up being reduced to, "By the way, there's also some characters and they do fairly predictable stuff."
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04-24-2003, 12:34 AM | #4 | |
Ghost Prince of Cardolan
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I think that Tolkien created Middle-earth. It was his world. It spawned from him. He designed every detail in Middle-earth that we know of. He made the stories, the myths in Middle-earth. He made the history of it all. The lands, the peoples, they all were created by him.
He may have used elves, which were thought of as the little creatures that helped Santa before Tolkien came out with his creation. But those elves he made into his own race, very different and separate from those other elves. And so with any other race in ME (dwarves, trolls, to name a few), he may have borrowed the name, but the race inside ME, those were his creations. A perfect example of what I'm trying to say is the goblins. At first, when he first created ME, he published the Hobbit, and one of the creatures in it were goblins. Now goblins were known before Tolkien. They were little monsters or whatever. He just borrowed the name. When he came out with LotR, he changed goblins to orcs, and they were completely his creation, name and all. He crafted goblins to his own race, which are orcs. ME was never existed before Tolkien. Maybe he did discover it in his mind. But before it was discovered, it was made, and it was made by Tolkien. Quote:
But one more thing. Why do people think that Tolkien discoevered ME? Where was it before?
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04-24-2003, 12:45 AM | #5 | |
Spirit of the Lonely Star
Join Date: Mar 2002
Posts: 5,133
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Jessica,
I'm so glad to see that you've made progress on this project. I remember how we talked about it almost a year ago. Doug, Willie, I think there's one more point here worthy of consideration. This is definitely how JRRT came to think of Middle-earth. He saw himself discovering something already in existence. No, I don't mean that he was claiming this as the literal history of our planet. He was not that loopy! But he did mean that the basic truths and characters of Middle-earth were somehow part of a lost mythological past or meaning which he was rediscovering. I will always remember that famous incident from the letters when a distingished and well-known visitor came to see Tolkien. The visitor pointed out that some of Tolkien's ilustrations were very similar to other drawings that he himself had found, only these were artists Tolkien had never looked at or studied. The visitor chided Tolkien saying: Quote:
I love that quote above. It is one of my favorites. So, Jessica, I will have to plead guilty and say that I agree with your thesis statement, at least if interpreted in that way!
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04-24-2003, 01:23 AM | #6 | |
Ghost Prince of Cardolan
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I guess what I was really needed to ask was what did Tolkien discover. Sometimes I take things too literal, and by this I did not mean I thought this thread was based on a literal sense [img]smilies/wink.gif[/img] . By saying Middle-earth I was wondering whether you meant Tolkien discovered/created this fantasy known as Middle-earth that does not really exist but we have in our minds and our hearts and we enter when we read it, or, he discovered/created this world called ME with its values, and morals, and themes, and plenty of other stuff too. But now I just confused myself and I have no clue on what I mean, or am trying to say, or what this all means. So I'll wait a little and let my thoughts settle.
But what you said Child of the 7th Age caught me: Quote:
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04-24-2003, 02:14 AM | #7 |
Wight
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No real time to respond right now, seeing that it's past 4 am, but here's an email from an online friend of mine about the topic. Interesting food for thought.
"it might be easier to view tolkien in two seperate entities. his mind and his creative being. his mind is something that has developed since birth. perhaps he first saw a picture of a dragon when he was three years old and filed it away in his mind. then later in high school, perhaps he developed a keen fascination for languages, particularly the constructional and grammatic aspects of it. then maybe later he fell in love with someone with beautifully dark hair and sharp ears. then as he grew and became inspired to write, his creative mind drew upon his past experiences (his mind) and translated them into the what we now know as middle earth. that dark haired girl he fell in love with became arwen. his fascination for languages translated in the elvish tongue, etc. it could be argued that his creation of a fictitous world came from memories of his own world. there's a distinction between creation and experience. i believe one cannot exist without the other. in order to create (ie. something like middle-earth) you need to be able to have experienced the same transcendental qualities sometime in your life. how can you write about something if you don't know about it or acknowledge it's existence? so yeah...middle earth was discovered because it already existed in tolkien's mind. it was simply his strong creative being that allowed it to take form." thanks everyone, for posting! Your comments are greatly appreciated [img]smilies/smile.gif[/img]
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http://www.cadential64.com The musicians had indeed laid bare the youngest, most innocent of our ideas of life, the indestructible yearning for the way things aren't and can never be. ~ Philip Roth, The Human Stain
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04-24-2003, 02:21 AM | #8 |
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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I think, originally, Tolkien's intention was to 're-create' England's lost mythology, taking the scraps he he could find scattered through the Eddas, Ango-saxon poems (chiefly Beowulf), folklore, etc, as well as the sources from other 'northern' cultures that appealed to him, like the Welsh Mabinogion & the Finnish Kalevala. Clearly, the intent was to sub create a world which would bring together those themes in a coherent way, but as he wrote 'the Tale grew in the telling', & became something else. Tolkien's Elves are not the Elves of Norse myth - as I said in another thread, he 'christianised' the Elves - gave them an individual soul & a moral conscience, which gave them the chance of 'salvation'.
In other words, I think the 'roots' of his 'Tree' are in the soil of the original Northern European mythology that he loved, but it grew & branched into its own form. |
04-24-2003, 12:20 PM | #9 |
Ghost Prince of Cardolan
Join Date: Dec 2002
Location: commonplace city
Posts: 518
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I may be getting too deep but this is the essence of creativity.
I always consider JRRT discovered it. Or at least what he did was to relay his tiny splinter of what he could actually "see", which was based primarily on languages. Who was it that wrote that nothing is original, what is "created" is merely a reflection of an echo from somewhere else in time/space...? |
04-24-2003, 02:18 PM | #10 | ||||
Ghost Prince of Cardolan
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Just two things here, Jessica Jade:
Quote:
You can always create something even if it has never existed. If you think it, and it's never been around before you've thought it, then it's been created, by you. You can always think of something new, however, it can be hard when you are trying to create something. You'll see what I mean in a little bit. Quote:
When you are trying however, there is no discovery. You construct it from scratch. You build a foundation and model it to look what you want it to look like *(see bottom)*. You may take bits and pieces from other places sometimes to help build your creation, but they are shaped and molded by you to fit your building, and then they are your creation and a part of your creation. I see what you're saying about memories of other things building up, yes, that's where he's borrowing bits and pieces, but he's making them his, and shaping them so they are no longer what they used to be. He is creating, when he knows he is completely aware of what he is doing, then he cannot discover it, he already knows. Quote:
davem said: Quote:
And the finishing touches are left to Tolkien. The building has been built. Whether it came out like that on it's own or if Tolkien intended it that way, it's been built. The finishing touches however, are left to Tolkien. He gets to make these little chages that may be so critical to whether other's like it. If they like it, they'll buy the building or the house, just as we have bought the book. And there are other things that Tolkien has left. he did not finish everything. Somethings our left for our speculation. Take Tome Bombadil. Tolkien never finished him, whether it was on purpose or not. But we are free to specualte and imagine. And who's to say everything is finished. It might not be so. A house may be built, but when it is sold, the owner is free to make any changes he or she wishes, like adding things. In which he/she does add somthing, then it shows that the house was not finished when it was done being built. Just as when we buy the book, we can interpet things our own way, or imagine what would have happened, and in that case, it is not yet finished.*
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04-24-2003, 06:35 PM | #11 |
Shade of Carn Dűm
Join Date: Jan 2003
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I personally agree with doug*platypus. That's just my opinion.
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04-25-2003, 08:02 AM | #12 |
Delver in the Deep
Join Date: Dec 2002
Location: Aotearoa
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Excellent - well done, Burzdol, finally a contender for best post of the millennium!
Willy, I think you're exactly right when you credit Tolkien for bringing all of these mythical elements together into one world. Yes, Dwarves and Elves existed (in various forms) before Middle-Earth was created. So did stirrups, and coffee, and gardening. But it took the incredible mind of Professor Tolkien to create an alternative world, parallel to our own, with occupants that consistently amaze us, most of all with their vivid realism. The parts that make up Middle-Earth were not created by Tolkien, but he definitely crafted the overall picture, in the same way you might make a house out of timber, nails, glass, etc., or in the way that a god like Aule would shape the world from iron and rock. Quite an achievement.
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