Tolkien, Self and Other

£24.99

Tolkien, Self and Other

This Queer Creature

Literature: history and criticism Literary theory Literary studies: c 1900 to c 2000 Fiction and Related items Cultural studies

Author: Jane Chance

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Collection: The New Middle Ages

Language: English

Published by: Palgrave Macmillan

Published on: 21 November 2016

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 579 Kb

ISBN: 9781137398963


Book Overview

This book examines key points of J. R. R. Tolkien’s life and writing career in relation to his views on humanism and feminism, particularly his sympathy for and toleration of those who are different, deemed unimportant, or marginalized—namely, the Other.

Jane Chance argues such empathy derived from a variety of causes ranging from the loss of his parents during his early life to a consciousness of the injustice and violence in both World Wars.

As a result of his obligation to research and publish in his field and propelled by his sense of abjection and diminution of self, Tolkien concealed aspects of the personal in relatively consistent ways in his medieval adaptations, lectures, essays, and translations, many only recently published.

These scholarly writings blend with and relate to his fictional writings in various ways depending on the moment at which he began teaching, translating, or editing a specific medieval work and, simultaneously, composing a specific poem, fantasy, or fairy-story.

What Tolkien read and studied from the time before and during his college days at Exeter and continued researching until he died opens a door into understanding how he uniquely interpreted and repurposed the medieval in constructing fantasy.

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