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02-21-2011, 10:57 PM | #1 |
Cryptic Aura
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A Defense of 'Lord of the Rings' against Modernist criticism
I'm not a regular reader of Tolkien Studies but perhaps I should be. I just came across this scholarly article by Professor Michael Drout which defends Tolkien against Modernist criticism by way of linguistic analysis.
Tolkien's Prose Style and its Literary and Rhetorical Effects There's some intriguing connections with Shakespeare's King Lear and an analysis of Tolkien's defense of kingship, to say nothing of an insightful suggestion about Denethor and the Witch King. As a rout of Modernist antipathy to Tolkien it should make many a Downer's day.
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I’ll sing his roots off. I’ll sing a wind up and blow leaf and branch away. Last edited by Bęthberry; 02-22-2011 at 10:45 AM. |
02-22-2011, 08:01 AM | #2 |
La Belle Dame sans Merci
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Oh my darling, you are mischievous.
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02-22-2011, 08:35 PM | #3 |
Cryptic Aura
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It was a slow night on the forum, m'dear.
But it is fascinating to see how Drout proves that Tolkien belongs up there with the big guns.
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02-22-2011, 10:39 PM | #4 | |
La Belle Dame sans Merci
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I find it fascinating that different areas of literature (and their relevant enthusiasts) constantly feel the need to defend and express their own validity. However it's possible that I'm spoiled: all of my essays over the past two years have been craft-oriented.
Instead of reading it as Tolkien-validation, I took this surprisingly readable piece more as a how-to guide of identifying the ingredients JRR used to bake his story. A kilo of Lear, a liter and a half of Old English, and a splash and a pinch of anachronisms for added taste... The use of uncommonly employed words draws subconscious - if not directly conscious - parallels between works. I doubt this is to say, "Look, LotR is just like Lear! Art!" but more to say, "Remember the themes in Lear of power, insanity, betrayal, redemption? You just keep that in the back of your mind, dear reader." One might say the parallels being drawn are being stretched a bit past plausibility, but think on it this way: if you see an author finish a thought with, "So it goes..." and you don't think of Vonnegut, it means you never read Vonnegut. To me, the use of intertextual lit references isn't swiping, and it neither confirms nor denies a text's cultural significance. It's laying a librarian-friendly scavenger hunt for your bibliophile audience, and it's playing psych games. Still, I was most interested in this paragraph about the use of sentence clarity and structure to convey power dynamics between characters: Quote:
Oh man, JRR, I sometimes forget why you're my literary homeboy...
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02-22-2011, 11:19 PM | #5 |
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Well, considering modernism was no longer modern decades ago, and we've past the point of post-modernism, I think Tolkien's already ancient text will certainly outlive any number of new delineators for modernity (hyper-modern?). That is, until we old sods shuttle off this mortal coil and everyone stops reading altogether, because the chips in their heads play four dimensional interactive movies 24 hours a day.
Where is my soma? I had it right here with the melange I was going to ingest prior to dinner.
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02-24-2011, 01:54 PM | #6 | |
Cryptic Aura
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It was Eliot's "Tradition and the Individual Talent" that firmly established the concept in academe that a poet's greatness does not lie with his deviation or retreat or departure from tradition but with his fidelity to past literature, expressed by Eliot as "the whole of the literature of Europe from Homer". The finest and best poets were those whose work re-informed the entire classical structure of European literature. For Eliot, tradition was the classical tradition. There was no female tradition, no post-colonial tradition, no northern tradition, no local folklore tradition, just this intimate dialogue with past greats. Talent was not a genius one was born with, but something developed through intimate acquaintance and study of past poetry. So when Tolkien came along and justified and valorised Northern Literature and mythologies, he was doing something outside the prevailing formalisation of the English canon. Thus, for over fifty years defenders of Tolkien have laboured in the shadow of Eliot and attempted to demonstrate how Tolkien's intertexual references demonstrate his place in Eliot's theory and his right to be regarded as part of the accepted literary canon. (Note here, I'm not accepting Eliot's theory, just explaining that generations of English students before you could not blithely claim that intertexual references don't establish significance.) I'm probably overgeneralising here, but I think this kind of defense has been much more common than any using any other literary theory. I cannot recall, for instance, seeing Bloom's theory of "the anxiety of influence" being applied to demonstrate Tolkien's rebellion against his predecessors. Probably some of the feminists have had a go at Tolkien, but few others. It might be fun to examine how each literary theory picks up (or doesn't) aspects of Tolkien: Freudian, Jungian, Lacanian for psychology, Kristeva, Derrida, post-colonial theory. Ultimately I think I would hear Tolkien's own voice: "But what of the banana peel?"
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02-24-2011, 05:00 PM | #7 | ||
La Belle Dame sans Merci
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And can Greatness be bestowed posthumously? Everyone knows that artists are dirt poor and misunderstood (excepting fiends like Damien Hirst) until well after death. So too with literature? Does the popularity and cultural milieu of LotR have postmortem effects on the Vulsunga Saga or Beowulf or etc? Would anyone care at all about Detective Comics if they hadn't created a spinoff with that weird and kinda interesting character, Batman? What I'm asking, I suppose, is if we can grant greatness retroactively, by way of what it birthed. And is it still great if nobody cares about it? I suppose I'm asking a tree falling in the woods question. Proust. Proust is great, right? How many people have actually read any of his work? And how many people pronounce his name right? How significant is Joseph Conrad if his biggest dead guy claim to fame is, "More high schoolers didn't read my book than didn't read yours!"? So what is significance? If significance is a specific set of conditions in which only European white boys fit, then yes, I suppose we might run into some problems with literature that glorifies legends of border cultures. And in that case, LotR is basically a nerdy professor writing fantasy fan fic about myths. However if significance is something that can be determined by the reaction of those confronted with it (either positive or negative), then we've got a bit of play room. Quote:
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02-25-2011, 11:17 AM | #8 | ||||||
Cryptic Aura
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It would also be fair to suggest that literature of the past can benefit from being taught in a classroom because the cultural and temporal distance can use a bit of explication. If all we read in school (or even on our own)l was of our own time, what paultry, pitiful minds we would have: without some kind of historical context or memory, we are blinkered. This is not, by the by, to defend Eliot's critical judgements (although some of his understanding of what happens when a poet really confronts other poets, of the past as well as of his own time, are interesting). Quote:
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I’ll sing his roots off. I’ll sing a wind up and blow leaf and branch away. Last edited by Bęthberry; 02-25-2011 at 11:43 AM. Reason: an excrable misuse of 'Little Gidding' |
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02-25-2011, 01:05 PM | #9 | ||||||
La Belle Dame sans Merci
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The dynamics between big city publishing and artist-endorsed literary experiments are... fluctuating. And odd. And full of blame casting. However, in my statement about the effect on 'the readers' I meant, specifically, readers who are neither writers nor academics. Your casual bookstore browsers, your train commuters, your vast numbers of people that want a book to read but have no interest in discussing whether or not it's appropriate to ascribe contemporary ideals of beauty and importance to works of a different era. Quote:
But I'm the same chick that finds half the pleasure she takes in Buffy marathons is due to having seen American Pie first. Hey Buffy, Xander, Giles: this one time? At band camp? Also, this is a similar discussion as whether your opinions about the LotR books are as astute if you saw the movies first. And it's a discussion we had a month ago at school, sitting around our workshop table with tea and coffee and fancy chocolates. That makes it sound more highbrow than it was: the chocolates were a present, not the norm, and the tea and coffee were dining hall fare, which means they were awful. In any case, one novelist drafted a short story that drew from several literary sources, most specifically My Fair Lady. It should probably be noted that I was the only one in the room that was unfamiliar with My Fair Lady (I've seen parts, and I know a few quotes, but that's about it). I felt equally left out when I was the only one that had seen Harry Potter 7 Part 1 in theaters, granted, but the point remained that this discussion about interliterary acquisitions centered on what experiences (literary or life) you can justifiably expect your readers to have, and if it's fair to blame the reader if they don't get your brilliant references. Say we're reading Eliot's The Waste Land and get as far as: Quote:
I hold to the philosophy that if nobody understands it, I've done something wrong, and if I'm writing for myself and not for readers, I should go write in a diary instead of somewhere public. But obviously not all writers follow that. I suppose the question here is what responsibilities, if any, do the writers have in the creation of their work, and what responsibilities, if any, do the readers have? I like to think we meet half way. Most of my undergrad lit profs took the established critical route of, "The text is holy. All the information is there. If you don't get it, it's your own failings. You probably lack strong moral fiber. You will never hold an advanced degree." Most of my graduate writing professors think we are contractually obligated to our readers from the first page: as long as you set up the parameters of the world and the story, you're free to do what you want as long as you follow the laws of your own creation. The other question, then, would be: why do we write? And who do we write for? And does it matter. Quote:
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02-25-2011, 02:33 PM | #10 | ||
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02-26-2011, 11:24 AM | #11 | ||||||
Cryptic Aura
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And I'm serious about referring to Tolkien because I think his essay on Beowulf sets out a fairly interesting theory of poetic art. He of course was attacking critics who saw in the poem nothing but an historical document, a quarry for anthropological, sociological, historical mining. Not that he denigrates those disciplines, but that he argues the situation ignores the most profound quality of the poem, its art. Quote:
So I think it might also be fun to apply some of Tolkien's literary theories to other authors. This is to ignore Fea's question about who the general reader is, because that is a thorny one indeed. I don't think a general reader exists; we are too splintered a culture and community and if in the past there was a sense of catholic (meaning universal) reader, it existed only because so much fell outside its range of vision. Quote:
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I saw the most amazing production of Hamlet the other night. (I'm remembering that Tolkien enjoyed theatre.) It opened up the play like I had never imagined it. It breathed new life into the old scrip (cliched old metaphor I know, but true). It set the story in modern and ancient Japan, employed three actors to play Hamlet, and cross-gender casting. Eliot and Pound never, ever gave me any sense of appreciation for the older literatures they alluded to, only a pathetic sense that they felt this museum-like dirge. Both that production and Tolkien, I think, have captured the sense of how to breath new life into old works.
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I’ll sing his roots off. I’ll sing a wind up and blow leaf and branch away. Last edited by Bęthberry; 02-26-2011 at 11:28 AM. |
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02-27-2011, 07:49 PM | #12 | |
La Belle Dame sans Merci
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But with the knowledge of the author, and the in depth knowledge of his life, are we obliged to take his life into account when we talk about his work? I say no, clearly, we are not. Not obliged, that is to say. However taking his life into account can give us new insight, if we want it. Or we can ignore his life and look at the work as an independent entity, singular unto itself. In that same way, we can gain new insight by approaching literature via different avenues of literary theory and criticism, but only if we want to, only if the question 'what if?' has us willing to suspend our disbelief in the validity of certain approaches long enough to consider what we might learn from them if, for a time, we think of them with complete seriousness.
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