Tolkien and the Invention of Myth

Tolkien and the Invention of Myth: A Reader is a 2004 collection of scholarly essays on J. R. R. Tolkien's writings on Middle-earth, edited by Jane Chance. It has been warmly welcomed by critics, though some of the student contributions are less useful than the revised journal articles, conference papers and lectures by the more experienced essayists, who include the established Tolkien scholars Marjorie Burns, Michael D. C. Drout, Verlyn Flieger, Gergely Nagy, Tom Shippey, and Richard C. West.

Tolkien and the Invention of Myth: A Reader
First edition, with painting The Gates of Morning by Ted Nasmith
EditorJane Chance
Authorsee text
LanguageEnglish
SubjectTolkien studies
GenreScholarly essays
PublisherUniversity Press of Kentucky
Publication date
2004
Media typePaperback
Pages340
ISBN978-0-8131-2301-1

Chapter summaries

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The essays[1]
Part Author Discipline Title Summary
Introduction Jane Chance Medievalist,
Tolkien studies
A 'Mythology for England'? The editor states that it is well known that Tolkien "yearned to create a 'mythology for England'" that would do what mythologies had done for other countries in Europe, but that he was not comfortable with Arthurian legend as it was contaminated by French notions of chivalry, which he "loathed", and it was uncertain "where he turned for models". Accordingly the collection examines his methodology, and then his classical, his Old Norse, his Old English, and his Finnish influences.
Backgrounds: Folklore, Religion, Magic, and Language Michaela Baltasar Fiction Tolkien and the rediscovery of myth Baltasar explores Tolkien's belief in the power of language to create myth, as opposed to the theories of myth held by the folklorist Andrew Lang and the philologist Max Müller.
Catherine Madsen Novelist Light from an invisible lamp: natural religion in The Lord of the Rings Madsen explains how Tolkien creates a "religious feeling" and a sort of natural religion without directly mentioning Christianity.
Mary E. Zimmer British literature Creating and re-creating worlds with words: the religion and the magic of language in The Lord of the Rings Zimmer discusses Tolkien's use of language to create the seemingly solid reality of Middle-earth. She discusses the use of names, including true names, with the implication that names and the things they denote are causally linked.
David Lyle Jeffrey English Tolkien as philologist Jeffrey examines Tolkien's philological use of names, complete with guidance for translators and others, revealing how Tolkien understood language to work.
Tolkien and Ancient Greek and Classical and Medieval Latin Gergely Nagy Tolkien studies Saving the myths : the re-creation of mythology in Plato and Tolkien Nagy points up several parallels between how Plato and Tolkien viewed myth. Both wrote myths of their own as if they were real traditions, creating an impression of depth.
Sandra Ballif Straubhaar Germanic studies Myth, late Roman history, and multiculturalism in Tolkien's Middle-Earth Straubhaar examines the influence of late Roman history on Middle-earth, as seen in the relationship between the civilised Gondor and the barbarian Rohan, paralleling ancient Rome's growing admiration for its energetic barbarian neighbours, as seen in Tacitus's history.
Jen Stevens Inklings From catastrophe to eucatastrophe: J.R.R. Tolkien's transformation of Ovid's Mythic Pyramus and Thisbe into Beren and Lúthien Stevens explores the parallels between the tale of Pyramus and Thisbe as told in Ovid's Metamorphoses, and Tolkien's central story of Beren and Lúthien.
Kathleen E. Dubs Humanities Providence, fate, and chance: Boethian philosophy in The Lord of the Rings Dubs relates Boethius's On the Consolation of Philosophy to Tolkien's presentation of luck, free will, and fate in The Lord of the Rings.
Tolkien and
Old Norse
Tom Shippey Philologist,
Tolkien studies
Tolkien and the appeal of the pagan: Edda and Kalevala Shippey explains how the Icelandic Prose Edda and the Finnish Kalevala served Tolkien as models of writings firmly "rooted" in the pagan mythologies of their times and places, complete with the Edda's "northern courage" and the Kalevala's sympathy and sadness.
Marjorie J. Burns Medievalist Norse and Christian gods: the integrative theology of J.R.R. Tolkien Burns explores parallels between the Norse gods and The Silmarillion's Valar. The mapping is complex, as for instance Odin's dark side is inherited by Melkor, while his brighter aspects go to Manwë.
Andy Dimond Tolkien studies The twilight of the elves: Ragnarök and the end of the Third Age Dimond relates the Norse Ragnarök to the War of the Ring.
Andrew Lazo Inklings Gathered round northern fires: the imaginative impact of the Kolbítar Lazo explores the impact of Tolkien's Oxford Old Norse study group the Kolbítar on how Tolkien and C. S. Lewis developed.
Tolkien and
Old English
Michael D. C. Drout English,
Tolkien studies
A mythology for Anglo-Saxon England Drout sets out how Tolkien's study of Anglo-Saxon literature and culture was related to his "pseudohistory", which "solved a number of historical and literary puzzles and was in itself aesthetically pleasing", even though Tolkien did not actually believe it. Drout suggests that Tolkien then deliberately covered over the links between Middle-earth and Anglo-Saxon history.
John R. Holmes English Oaths and oathbreaking: analogues of Old English Comitatus in Tolkien's myth Holmes studies Tolkien's use of sworn oaths in Middle-earth, relating this to Germanic and Anglo-Saxon culture.
Alexandra Bolintineanu Medievalist On the borders of old stories: enacting the past in Beowulf and The Lord of the Rings Bolintineanu compares the purpose of the Beowulf poet's use of embedded stories with Tolkien's in The Lord of the Rings. The old tales can offer moral guidance, comfort, and a doomed grandeur.
Tolkien and Finnish Verlyn Flieger Medievalist
Tolkien studies
A mythology for Finland: Elias Lönnrot and J.R.R. Tolkien as mythmakers Flieger explores why Tolkien should have decided to create a mythology for England, though his would be fictional. She proposes that the inspiration of Lönnrot, and the resulting Kalevala, were both important to Tolkien. She suggests further that Tolkien liked the response of artists to the Kalevala, and stated that he hoped artists would respond to his own mythology.
Richard C. West Tolkien studies Setting the rocket off in story: the Kalevala as the germ of Tolkien's legendarium West too looks at the Kalevala, describing how the Finnish language nfluenced his Elvish language of Quenya, and how the mythology seeped into "his mind-set". One concrete similarity is the tragic tale of Túrin, whose character is developed from that of Kullervo.
David Elton Gay Folklore J.R.R. Tolkien and the Kalevala: some thoughts on the Finnish origins of Tom Bombadil and Treebeard Gay argues that the character Väinämöinen in the Kalevala influenced both the spirit of place Tom Bombadil in the Old Forest, and the tree-giant, the Ent Treebeard, in Fangorn Forest.

Reception

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Chad Engbers writes in The Lion and the Unicorn that the essay authors include "the usual suspects", a small number of well-known Tolkien scholars – here "Nagy, Shippey, Burns, Drout, Flieger, and West", who write knowledgeably in a style "more expository than polemical". A second category, the weakest in Engbers's view, comprises the junior scholars such as Baltasar, Dimond, and Lazo. He finds Baltasar's essay "like a very respectable graduate paper", whereas Dimond says "too little" and Lazo "says too much". A third category is of scholars and authors with established reputations outside Tolkien studies. Jeffrey writes freshly and well on philology, while the novelist Madsen writes an "incisive and honest" assessment of Christianity in The Lord of the Rings. Engbers concludes that while not all the essays are specially useful, "the volume's virtues outnumber its vices".[2]

Carol Leibiger in Journal of the Fantastic in the Arts writes that the essays, by medievalists, Tolkien scholars, and students, are based on a mix of conference papers, lectures by Shippey and Drout, and older articles by Madsen, Zimmer, and Jeffrey from as far back as 1980. In her view, Drout "elegantly and convincingly" shows Tolkien's way of linking to the Anglo-Saxon period, spanning its culture, history, and language, so as to construct a "pseudohistorical mythology" for England. She finds Nagy's comparison of Tolkien's use of myth with Plato's "fascinating", whereas she feels that Straubhaar's use of two "rabid and uni[n]formed" critics (for her discussion of Tolkien and race) spoils her essay. Of the student essays, Lazo is "long-winded", full of self-references, and mistakes. Leibiger concludes that the volume assembles numerous "important studies of the sources of Tolkien's legendarium".[3]

Margaret Sinex writes in Tolkien Studies that this is the second in a series of three essay collections on Tolkien, the other two being the 2003 Tolkien the Medievalist and the 2005 Tolkien's Modern Middle Ages. Four old journal papers are revised for this collection. She finds "appealing" Zimmer's essay on Tolkien's "verbal magic"; it explores incantations or "word magic"; two types of "name magic", involving a taboo on the use of proper names, and the changing of a name when a person's nature changes; and the "true name" which causes what it names. Straubhaar's essay is in Sinex's view "convincing" in its argument that the dynastic marriages between Gondor and Rohan reflect the later Roman Empire's "gradual acceptance of mixed marriages with barbarian tribes on their empire's distant borders."[4] Sinex calls the volume "a superb collection of essays that illuminates Tolkien's own understanding of the nature and function of myth and his process of mythmaking." In her view, it helps the reader to grasp "Tolkien's belief in the creative, generative potency of language".[4]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Chance 2004.
  2. ^ Engbers 2006, pp. 134–138.
  3. ^ Leibiger 2005, pp. 158–161.
  4. ^ a b Sinex 2006, pp. 205–217.

Sources

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