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09-06-2009, 02:42 PM | #1 |
A Mere Boggart
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Art!
For all our discussions where we try and pin down the answers to questions like "but what did he mean?" isn't Tolkien's whole legendarium just one huge, complex and beautiful work of Art?
I would contend that there isn't one deeper meaning to it all, the evidence being that every reader finds different meanings in it, and some find none at all, they just like the way it looks, like Gimli when he saw the Glittering Caves of Aglarond. I don't think even Tolkien could pin it all down to 'mean something'. He flatly denied it was allegorical in any way, and came up with umpteen ideas about this enigmatic 'meaning'. Maybe it's a symptom of the modern world that we're all Utilitarians and everything must have purpose, rather than just exist as a purely decorative and pleasurable object? Critics try and work out what the Mona Lisa is all about; isn't it just a beautiful portrait? Of course, this line of thought risks cutting all scope for discussion dead, but it shouldn't. Maybe we should, instead of trying to find some useful purpose to Tolkien's work, just sit back and discuss the sheer poetry of it all? What do you think?
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09-06-2009, 04:09 PM | #2 | |
A Voice That Gainsayeth
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I guess Tolkien's works just have so many dimensions, which just proves how rich they are, like many other epics which deserve the attention, and which have found their popularity and enduring popularity in the history and throughout centuries or even millenia themselves just because of the same reason. With those books, and I believe Tolkien has the potential to belong to the cathegory (let's talk about it in a few hundred years), it's that they don't need any "advertising" or artifical way of labeling them as "classics", because they have and still can find their way to the humans' hearts themselves. Books like these of Tolkien differ from the pure works of "simple belles-lettres" which do not have any more purpose than to amuse us, and also from the purely utilitarian books written in order to convey some message (which are often, alas, very badly written even if they are supposed to be nice to read). It makes me wonder - it just occured to me - it is really possible that Tolkien himself did not perceive, or expect, the deeper thoughts and meanings behind his texts, and when he was writing it, he, just like Valar in his own story, "did not know that it had any other purpose apart from its own beauty".
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"Should the story say 'he ate bread,' the dramatic producer can only show 'a piece of bread' according to his taste or fancy, but the hearer of the story will think of bread in general and picture it in some form of his own." -On Fairy-Stories |
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09-06-2009, 04:17 PM | #3 | |
A Mere Boggart
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I think the germ of his work was simply an urge to write, to create this thing of beauty being inspired by so many different works of literature and art, and by his own life, by faith, by language. He spent years perfecting this writing so that it was coherent, even to the extent that he made names fot the linguistic patterns he had laid down, that moon phases and stars were correct. He was like a painter working in the most meticulous detail imaginable. It almost seems a shame to pick it all apart and try to impose meanings upon it all, rather like looking at a beautiful painting and instead of sinking into the view to examine what sort of brushes were used and why. I wonder why we do that?
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09-06-2009, 05:15 PM | #4 |
Ghost Prince of Cardolan
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I think I would ask "define purpose." Giving pleasure, providing thought, or entertainment, amusement, something pretty to cover an ugly hole in the wall... all of those are purpose. Whether or not our modern world considers such things important or valuable is its own loss. The stimulation of imagination is, to me, something very important, valuable, and full of purpose, as both invention and culture need a healthy imagination to survive. It seems to me that Tolkien's work has provided a vast number of people with a powerful wellspring of inspiration, and that alone is a tremendous purpose, whether or not Tolkien intended it at first. Not everyone will think so, but then, some things I was once taught were the most Important Purposes in the world turned out to be some of the most negative influences on my life in the long run.
Purpose, I suppose, is very much in the eye, and mind, of the beholder.
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09-06-2009, 06:24 PM | #5 |
Wight
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I think they were good fantasy novels.
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09-06-2009, 11:17 PM | #6 | ||
A Voice That Gainsayeth
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"Should the story say 'he ate bread,' the dramatic producer can only show 'a piece of bread' according to his taste or fancy, but the hearer of the story will think of bread in general and picture it in some form of his own." -On Fairy-Stories |
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09-07-2009, 07:33 AM | #7 |
Ghost Prince of Cardolan
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I would say everything in Life needs a purpose and these novels are lovely but have the purpose of entertainment.
My philosophy on Art as Fea well knows is all about function "Go for Form and Function, but if both are not attainable you need Function." I always say that. Beauty itself I would say except in mating habits of humans Not a uselful thing. So again I say LOTR entertains that IS it's function beyond that point is a realm for philosophers and critics.
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09-07-2009, 08:04 AM | #8 | |||
Curmudgeonly Wordwraith
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Lal, you seem to be following (at least in this thread) the 19th century 'Art for Art's Sake' movement.
Oscar Wilde made the point that... Quote:
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Ummm...where do you wish to start?
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09-07-2009, 08:54 AM | #9 |
Leaf-clad Lady
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Beauty itself is a purpose. Of course it is. Whether Tolkien's work has another purpose than beauty is something known by the author alone. (And he has, I think, denied there being another purpose.) We can, however, argue about whether a purpose given to his work later and by other people is a purpose in the same way the original purpose is.
What I find interesting as well is that we seem to have a need to make sense of things by discussing things like "Do Balrogs have wings?" or "Why didn't the eagles just carry Frodo to Mount Doom?" or "What was Tom Bombadil?" When I see a thread like that appear, it always pops into my mind that LotR was, after all, a book, a fiction, a stunning work of art. There is no answer to questions like that because Tolkien didn't answer them in his book. Nor do we need those answers, necessarily, to enjoy the art, the beauty, the poetry of it all. In fact, to me it's rather the same as telling me that something beautiful is actually a chemical reaction in my brain. A killjoy. An attempt to analyse and make sense of a thing of beauty, whether it is an art guy explaining why some element in a painting is in the specific place it happens to be in or a scientist explaining how the sea is made of H2O molecules, is something I can't help but regard as interesting but dull - something that takes away the mystery. For myself, I don't want to know if there was a moral teaching behind LotR. I don't want to know whether Balrogs have wings.
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09-07-2009, 09:10 AM | #10 | |
Gruesome Spectre
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While I don't mind ruminating over whether Balrogs have wings, or what Tom Bombadil really was, I draw the line at imparting metaphor and allegory to these works. That's the reason I insist on an 'in-story' explanation for Tom. Breaking down a story while trying to figure out a 'hidden' meaning or intent by the author has always seemed to me a Sarumanish thing to do. And Gandalf didn't care much for such activity.
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I get no insight from prying into the author's head looking for all the answers though. The text usually has answers enough, and when it doesn't, that's where individual interpretations, which are virtually limitless in their variety, come into play to keep things interesting. Any one seen the movie Dead Poet's Society?
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09-07-2009, 11:26 AM | #11 |
Pilgrim Soul
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I think Tolkien did have a purpose in that he created Arda as a place for his invented languages to live and be. In the process like the elves of Lorien he put the thought of all that he loved in to what he made and their presence can be distinguished by those that have the "eyes to see that can".
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09-07-2009, 05:35 PM | #12 | |
Flame of the Ainulindalė
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Goethe was climbing the Alps with his romanticist friend and when the sun set in beautiful colours his friend asked him how dull it would be for Goethe as he was a student of light and colour as a "scientist", that he wouldn't get the feeling of it. And then Goethe replied that on the contrary, knowing how the colours were born made it even a greater experience as it was not only an aesthetic but also an intellectual experience at the same time... Like Morthoron implies, we have a nice divide between the romanticism of feeling and then the intellectualism of reason. Not that he suggests we should choose between the two - and not that I suggest it. But we should be aware of the divide and that none is the clear champion. I mean "take away the mystery"? I do hear that oftentimes at school. But what does that actually mean? Why are the "mysteries" of nature poorer than those produced by our poor imagination (I mean the "unicorns" or " anthropomorphic Gods", really, how low can you get)? I mean science has explained a lot of things that had a "mystical" explanation earlier but aren't their explanations even more mysterious? The idea that matter is actually composed of tiny particles and are merely constructed of nothing? How do you understand that even if it's taught to you at school? There's no mystery in there? Or that those tiny particles actually can be either waves or energy? What about the dark matter? Black holes sucking everything into them? Or the microscopic life-forms discovered that are more dreadful than any aliens Hollywood has produced, life-forms discovered from 10 kilometers+ under the sea thriving without sunlight, in acid... Would any human imagination thought of these unless the world threw them on our inquisitive eyes and minds? In medieval times it was thought that human imagination was "connecting those things in nature that were not connected and dividing those which were not divided in nature". How true (think of the unicorns or anthropomorphic Gods again)! All fine and dandy, but dependent on our everyday vision of the world itself, built from our experiences... Or to pose the question from a different angle: why is something you can't articulate dearer than that which you can articulate? And this I think is more to the point made here. Okay too late (RL) to press the point, but let me just make a few questions... In music as such (non-vocal music that is) or in non-figurative art one could say there is no easily discerned conceptual substance. But every novel, every poem, every song, every theater-piece is conceptrual through and through. They are built from concepts and their combinations. The question remains are the individual works immune to translation, can they be described meaningfully in other concepts? The romantics made a difference between allegories and symbols meaning that an allegory was something you could explain with other concepts (eg. describe what it meant; like a scale meaning justice or a lion meaning courage etc.) but with symbols you could only point at the work and say: that is what is meant in there. So is a piece of art a symbol in the romantic sense? Our culture tends to champion that view today... Let me draw a parallel here. The romantic movement also "discovered" imagination again. To them it was inspiration, something coming from the innermost recesses of our individual being (paving the way for psycho-analysis and the concept of unconscious). But "inspiration" had meant something completely different before the 19th century Germany (and France). In-spirare actually means to "breath in", to breath in from outside - from the muses in the earliest notes of our culture. So where do our "new" ideas - that make works of art, engineering, science... - come from; from outside of us (eg. the shared world open to all of us) or from the innermost recesses of absolutely particular individuals? How should we "read" art? As something that can be shared with others - even if disagreeing but then again helping others to see things they don't see (or getting "corrected" or being opened with new perspectives by others) - or as private experiences closed to any conceptual sharing just keeping with our own feeling here and now? Bah... the time is running. But I hope I managed to make at least a few provocative intrusions into the subject... And to avoid any misunderstandings, I'm not sure I'm an advocate of either extreme view I've built up here. Like Aristotle said, the virtuous way is somewhere in between the extremes...
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Upon the hearth the fire is red Beneath the roof there is a bed; But not yet weary are our feet... Last edited by Nogrod; 09-07-2009 at 05:41 PM. |
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09-18-2009, 02:34 PM | #13 | ||
shadow of a doubt
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Physicists have mathematically reconstructed and explained the creation of the universe down to the first tiny fractions of a pico-second (not saying they are right) and more and more is learned about our mind and consciousness. Still, the true orgin and meaning behind our existence here remains as much or more of a mystery, as Nogrod says. While physicists may argue convincingly for the Big Bang-theory, they still have no convincing answer just as to how something could come out of nothing, and how nothing can be everything. Chances are they never will either, but isn't the quest for knowledge and progress the very essence of humanity? I at least can't help to want to know. If the evidence don't add up, I will question it. But each to his own. That said, I'm not a fan of academic literary analysis, unless the work in question is primarily an idea-book, which LotR certainly isn't. Not that it's lacking ideas, mind you.
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"You can always come back, but you can't come back all the way" ~ Bob Dylan Last edited by skip spence; 09-18-2009 at 02:39 PM. |
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09-18-2009, 05:22 PM | #14 | |
A Voice That Gainsayeth
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And it is once again the same whether the question is whether there are faeries dancing in the moonlight in the forest or what one could see from the horizon of a black hole. It should just be acknowledged that at moments when it's a matter of aesthetic choice, one could see it from different points of view. Somebody just does not want to admire the beauty of the complexity of photones or whatever it is, but just sunlight as he sees it with naked eye. Somebody just may want to forget that Elves don't exist but wants to imagine that just behind the trees in front of him, there is one hiding there. Isn't this, after all, what we are all sort of prone to doing here? Even if just when reading LotR, if nothing else? I really even cannot say aloud, or write, that "there was no Gondolin, ever", because it's just not true! And that's just the point and also what others have said before here: When we are discussing Tolkien, sometimes we just don't want to hear "Tom Bombadil is Tolkien himself", because there is NO Tolkien in Middle-Earth, there is just Tom Bombadil, who is a real walking and living figure; just like the sunlight is just sunlight for our eyes - no matter how hard you try - and not any set of photones or whatever it might be.
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"Should the story say 'he ate bread,' the dramatic producer can only show 'a piece of bread' according to his taste or fancy, but the hearer of the story will think of bread in general and picture it in some form of his own." -On Fairy-Stories |
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09-19-2009, 06:05 AM | #15 | ||
shadow of a doubt
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What bugs me though in other walks of life is that people only see what they want to see, believe what they want to believe. When it's more convenient to believe in myths and fantasies than actual empirical evidence or just plain common sense (if there is such a thing), they do so, and when politics comes into the mix, this can be very dangerous. Therefore I say, don't shy away from the truth and see things are they truly are. For me it doesn't take anything away from a beautiful sunset knowing that it isn't in fact Arien retreating behind the walls of night. Indeed it just adds another dimension to my enjoyment of it, as Nogrod says. As does Arien.
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"You can always come back, but you can't come back all the way" ~ Bob Dylan Last edited by skip spence; 09-19-2009 at 06:15 AM. |
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09-19-2009, 08:15 AM | #16 | ||
A Voice That Gainsayeth
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"Should the story say 'he ate bread,' the dramatic producer can only show 'a piece of bread' according to his taste or fancy, but the hearer of the story will think of bread in general and picture it in some form of his own." -On Fairy-Stories |
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09-19-2009, 04:51 PM | #17 | ||||
Banshee of Camelot
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I agree with Legate and Greenie, too much analysing spoils the beauty of a text for me. After all, Tolkien wrote LotR to be enjoyed, not to be analysed!
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Yes! "wish-fulfilment dreams" we spin to cheat our timid hearts, and ugly Fact defeat! |
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09-29-2009, 12:43 PM | #18 | |
Leaf-clad Lady
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The same, I think, can be applied to a work of art. I understand people who have a need to explain it, but for myself, I am more content just taking it in as it is, without in-depth analysis. I don't need to analyse why exactly it is beautiful. The beauty, in itself, is enough.
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"But some stories, small, simple ones about setting out on adventures or people doing wonders, tales of miracles and monsters, have outlasted all the people who told them, and some of them have outlasted the lands in which they were created." |
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09-29-2009, 03:11 PM | #19 | |||
Wight of the Old Forest
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What matters to me about myths is that they tell stories in order to make sense of the world - but not by explaining it in a proto- or pseudo-scientific cause and effect way, not by unravelling the mystery, but by showing us how to relate to the mystery. E.g. our ancestors who worshipped Thor knew that a thunderstorm could be dangerous (so better not stand beneath an oak in case Mjolnir missed the mark), but they also knew that for all its violence the thunderstorm was their friend - that Old Redbeard was busy protecting them against the forces of chaos, clearing the air and bringing rain that would nourish their crops (he wasn't married to Sif, the corn-goddess, for nothing). Quote:
So in a way you're right - to see the Mona Lisa truly wouldn't mean seeing pigment and canvas, nor seeing the historical Lisa del Giocondo (or whoever the real model was), but seeing what Leonardo painted. But if the Mona Lisa becomes alive for you - if she engages your imagination, if you start wondering what kind of woman she is and why she's smiling that way, if she becomes a person rather than a painting - then you're entering the realm of myth. Quote:
But why analyse at all, then? Well, for me it's not so much a need to explain anything, but rather that when I see a painting, listen to a piece of music or read a book or poem for the 2nd, 3rd or umpteenth time I can't help noticing things about it (like e.g. Leonardo's use of sfumato rather than clear outlines, or that the two halves of the landscape on either side of Mona Lisa's head don't fit together). And once I've noticed them, I start thinking about them and what part they play in creating that initial impression, and I like pointing them out to others and hearing what they think about them or what other things they may have noticed that escaped me. And funnily, this doesn't spoil my experience of the work of art in question at all - or rather, it's a hallmark of truly great works of art that they can take the analysis and still blow me away at the umpteenth+1 reading, viewing or whatsoever (not the least because I'll probably discover yet another thing about them I hadn't noticed before).
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Und aus dem Erebos kamen viele seelen herauf der abgeschiedenen toten.- Homer, Odyssey, Canto XI |
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09-29-2009, 04:37 PM | #20 | |
shadow of a doubt
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Science is all about finding a pattern, a predictability, it looks to explain and order things based on empirical evidence or theoretic models, and using these methods we now know what a sunset is, why we see the colours and how they are created. But seeing a sunset is an altogether different thing, because that is an individual interpretation in our brain, something our crude (in comparison to the human mind) scientific methods are powerless to predict or explain. A sunset isn't objectively beautiful, it becomes beautiful because your mind interprets it so. For me it isn't really the sunset that is beautiful, it's you, or should I say, the human mind. All the beauty in the world, as you perceive it, is in your head and nowhere else and that's what art is, isn't it? And since art is completely subjective, science has no role in evaluating its quality, and I do agree that analysis of art, if we talk about the pseudo-scientific stuff carried out at universities, is if not unnecessary, rather dry and dull. Not something I'd like to do, in any case. Hope that made any sense, I should really be in bed by now...
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"You can always come back, but you can't come back all the way" ~ Bob Dylan |
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09-29-2009, 05:01 PM | #21 | |
Gruesome Spectre
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For instance, I actually have very little appreciation for 'art', when you're talking about the painted canvas and the sculpted clay. I am most moved by music, with the written word coming in second. And the music that causes an emotional response in me may make you want to retch, and vice-versa. But if we both are looking at a bright Moon in a star-strewn sky, or the Sea pounding a rocky coastline, the effects on each of us will probably be quite similar. I think 'nature' calls to all of us in much the same manner, whereas finding beauty and meaning in the works of Man is indeed an individual exercise.
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Music alone proves the existence of God. |
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09-29-2009, 05:02 PM | #22 | |
A Mere Boggart
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Sometimes, in fact most times, it's much more enjoyable to look at a painting or a poem and both enjoy the powerful picture it makes and to look at how the colours and the words fit together in that certain way. Instead of looking at it and trying to figure out what the Artist meant.
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09-30-2009, 03:34 AM | #23 | |||
shadow of a doubt
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I mean, I find that the enjoyment one gets from art, or anything else for that matter (many things could be called art), often to a degree depends on your knowledge and engagement in the subject matter. Take football fex. If you've hardly ever kicked a ball, don't understand the rules or tactics involved or how difficult it is to hit a good cross, and are unfamiliar with the players and the teams, chances are you're not going to appreciate watching a game, be that the Champions League final. Same goes with looking at a painting, or reading a book, imo. If you have some idea of the effort and skill it must've taken painting the roof of the Sistine Chapel, recognise the motives and characters, understand the symbolism, also know a bit about Michelangelo himself, his life-situation when he made the masterpiece, how Renaissance Italy was like during his days, and how difficult obtaining and mixing good paint was in those days, you are likely to enjoy looking at the piece much more than if you just walk in as a tabula rasa, don't you think? Although Tolkien denied any specific allegorical purpose to LotR- and I believe him - it still speaks to us in more ways than telling a good story, and Tolkien certainly had a purpose, or numerous, when he wrote the book. I believe there's plenty of 'meaningful purpose' in any good writers works, and I don't see any harm in speculating just what Tolkien had in mind writing his books; quite the opposite, discussing this with smart people here only adds to my enjoyment them. Of course, a good story isn't a good story if it doesn't speak of the human condition in some general way, and another hallmark of a good book is that it goes beyond the original purpose of the writer, and can support lots of unintended interpretations and ideas too, ideas that I might find odd, but others profound and undeniably true. Those are often fun to discuss too. Well, once again I've strayed way beyond my original thought and am now confused as to where I started from or what point I was trying to make. Edit. This is very true though: Quote:
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"You can always come back, but you can't come back all the way" ~ Bob Dylan Last edited by skip spence; 09-30-2009 at 03:39 AM. |
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09-30-2009, 04:11 AM | #24 | |
A Voice That Gainsayeth
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Take music for example. I think most people don't bother who composed this and that and that he actually lived in a cottage in the countryside where he had two pigs and one duck while he was composing this. Yet still, people enjoy much of the music. Anyway, the main point - and I believe we all, or almost all, agree on that here - is that of course, Tolkien's work is something that has so many dimensions and analysing it may be fun. That's what we are doing here all the time. There's a difference between analysing and analysing, that is I think the main issue. Like, if you are asked a question "who was Tom Bombadil", one may answer "I think he was a Maia", another "I think he was Tolkien himself" and another "I don't want to know, he is a mystery". Now, there are people - of the first kind - who start a thread and would like to discuss whether Tom was a Maia or Eru or some other unknown spirit, and they "analyse", and they enjoy themselves. Now suddenly another person, of the second kind, comes in and says "he was Tolkien" or "he was the manifestation of Simple Life". Which is something many of the people of the first kind consider "unfair", as of course there is NO Tolkien in M-E, and they don't care to know which philosophical aspect or whatever was Tom the manifestation of. They consider the Second Group as "breaching" their speculation, indeed "breaking the light" in the fashion of Saruman, as they really don't want to dig into this, for them Tom is a living person and nobody has the right to reduce him to some moral principle or metaphore. And then the third group appears, shaking head at the both of them and saying "but don't you see that Bombadil is as he is? He even says it himself. Why should you ask who he is, if he himself is not saying it? Why should we dig into this?" And they consider even the first group being the "lightbreakers". And that's not to say that these groups are not interchangeable. The very same person who condemned Group Two might be on a different thread or even on the same thread in the very next day discussing what are the enduring values or truths behind the Lord of the Rings. I guess it's all an issue of sort of internal approach among a group of people, or of an individual. Every work of art has these different levels of reception, it HAS them, and it's a matter of choice if you want only to gaze at the sunset and experience its beauty (to return back to the favourite example), to imagine a chariot of the sun going down the evening sky, or to wonder at the amazing order of the universe and think "wow, and so the atmosphere can bend the light like this?" It is only a matter of acknowledging, also, if you are talking to somebody else, in which terms he or she is thinking now, so that one of you does not end up saying "oh, look how the chariot of the Sun descends today" and the other, mistaking the poetic language used by the other for lack of education (and seriously worried that his companion had missed several centuries of scientific discoveries), shouting "no, what are you saying, this is a big ball of hydrogen and helium!"
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"Should the story say 'he ate bread,' the dramatic producer can only show 'a piece of bread' according to his taste or fancy, but the hearer of the story will think of bread in general and picture it in some form of his own." -On Fairy-Stories |
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09-30-2009, 08:32 AM | #25 | |
Ghost Prince of Cardolan
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That, I think, is rather like the difference between appreciating a work of art for the feelings it evokes in one rather than looking for the artist's intent. One is emotional; the other is intellectual. They can co-exist (despite Mary Ingalls' opinion ), and can, I believe, enhance one another. Not all artists have a specific intent in creating a work, beyond a desire to put an idea or image in their head into a form where others can see it, and thus can share it, but all Art does have something of its creator in it, even if it's merely in word choice or brush strokes. The worst stories and paintings and such are ones that follow an external formula for "how to write a story" or "how to make a painting" and have little of the artist's own feelings and thoughts in the work. There is a great deal of Tolkien's beliefs and feelings in his work, and there always has been. It can be appreciated on both thinking and feeling levels because he was a thinking and feeling person who wrote to appease his own sense of Art and not a predefined formula for how to write a book. If one wants to appreciate the beauty of the words without looking behind them for a larger meaning or intent, that's fine; and if one wants to go delving to see Tolkien the Author and his thoughts and beliefs peeping out through his words, that's fine, too.
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Call me Ibrin (or Ibri) :) Originality is the one thing that unoriginal minds cannot feel the use of. John Stewart Mill |
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10-25-2009, 04:10 PM | #26 |
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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Just come across this episode of Nemi :
Kind of sums it up, huh? |
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