Tolkien Gleanings #234

Tolkien Gleanings #234

* Now released, a preview of the front cover for the Kindle ebook version of the forthcoming Collected Poems.

* The Jewish Journal has a new article on “Tolkien’s Timely Testimony”, and its importance in the current climate. Freely available online.

* A new long post at The Blog of Marzabul, “”And That Means Comfort” — On the Shire as anti-Faerie”, asks… “is the Shire rather less safe and idealised than one might imagine?” In fact, a sort of “anti-Faerie”? Well, yes, I’d say so… if one reads closely and gleans the wider context from the text. Such as something the blog article omits, that the Shire has four seasons. As anyone who lives in the British Isles knows, that means discomfort for much of the year. The Shire is also known to have had some very hard winters within living memory. For instance the winter in which the Shire was invaded by the white wolves, a winter which a young Bilbo must have experienced.

* A new special issue of the open-access journal LinguaCulture, on “C.S. Lewis: The Re-enchanted Academic” (June 2024). Includes, among others, “The Dauntless Don: How C.S. Lewis Became a Public Intellectual, 1938-1944” and a review of the book Many Times and Many Places: C.S. Lewis and the Value of History (2023). Freely available online.

* Releasing at the end of September 2024, the book The Mythmakers: The Remarkable Fellowship of C.S. Lewis & J.R.R. Tolkien. Not the graphic novel I vaguely thought it was, since it turns out to be… “prose interspersed with images and narrative comics”. Also, seemingly not aimed at sophisticated teens and adults, since it’s to be published by Abrams Fanfare… “a new imprint from Abrams Children’s Books dedicated to comics for young readers”.

* A new young children’s picture-book, in hardcover for spring 2025, Painting Wonder: How Pauline Baynes Illustrated the Worlds of C.S. Lewis and J.R.R. Tolkien. Pre-ordering now.

* The Spectator magazine has a new article on “The expensive business of quoting poetry” ($ possible paywall, though I had the whole article)…

“the idea that there’s a distinction of legal status between [prose and poetry] is bizarre. It seems perverse and unwarranted that you could quote great paragraphs of Vikram Seth’s novel A Suitable Boy, in a critical work about Seth, without a by-his-leave. But that you’d need to avoid quoting more than a line or two from his verse novel The Golden Gate.”

* In The Birmingham Mail (29th August 2024) ($ paywall)… “More than 10,000 Classic FM listeners selected their favourite scores. Howard Shore’s music from the [LoTR] fantasy films, based on J.R.R. Tolkien’s books, took the top spot.” For the benefit of those outside the UK, I should add that Classic FM is the UK’s main free-to-air classical music radio station.

* Apparently in France translations of Tolkien’s books are published by a relatively small publisher, Christian Bourgois. The French press report that it has this week been bought out by Groupe Madrigall, the third-largest publishing group in France.

Tolkien Gleanings #233

Tolkien Gleanings #233

* A new Beyond Bree book review, hosted as an archived PDF at the publisher Walking Tree, reviewing The Romantic Spirit in the Works of J.R.R. Tolkien (2024). Freely available online.

* The latest Journal of Tolkien Research has added a long and thorough review of Reading Tolkien in Chinese (2024).

* At the VoegelinView, a review of the book Theology, Fantasy, and the Imagination (2023).

* The Catholic Theology Show podcast’s latest episode is “J.R.R. Tolkien and the Catechesis on Creation”. Free on YouTube.

* At The European Conservative, the new article “Tolkien’s Paradise”… “If we consider the characteristics of Paradise present in various religious traditions, we can easily compare and identify them with the features of the wondrous lands in Middle-earth.”

* Earth and Heaven blog has a new 2024 review of The Messiah Comes to Middle-earth (2017). Now a book of three printed lectures, but originally part of… “Wheaton College’s Hanson Lectureship Series, [in which] Wheaton College President Philip Ryken examines the thesis that various characters in [LoTR] represent different aspects of the nature of the Messiah”

* The Spanish open-access journal Helice: Critical Thinking on Speculative Fiction publishes in Spanish and some English. Of special note is the 2023 English article “A Century of High Fantasy in Latin Europe (1838-1938), and Beyond: A Historical Overview”. Freely available online.

* A scan at Archive.org of a late-1970s ‘blank pages notebook’, with sketchy illustrations as framing marginalia, titled A Hobbit’s Travels: being the hitherto unpublished travel sketches of Sam Gamgee (1978). Its companion A Hobbit’s Journal was also published in the same format and by the same artist, though Archive.org only has the cover freely available online. There appear to have been four such notebooks by the artist, the others being A Tolkien Journal (faces of the Fellowship and others), and A Walk Through the Shire (various scenes of hobbit life in the Shire).

* And finally, NewsThump hilariously reports “New power station to be powered by J.R.R. Tolkien spinning in his grave”.

Tolkien Gleanings #232

Tolkien Gleanings #232

* OzMoot 2025 is set for 24th-26th January 2025, in Australia and online ($35 ticket for online). The organisers now have a theme, ‘The Music of Words: Language, Poetry, and Music in Tolkien’s Works’. The deadline for proposals is 24th December 2024.

* The Welsh nationalist online publication Nation.Cymru has a book review of the new Yr Hobyd, the new Welsh translation of The Hobbit. The review is freely available online (in English), and the reviewer notes that various Welsh dialects are used to aid the characterisation.

* CNews has an interview in French with Vincent Ferre, about the huge new table-trembling edition of the Dictionnaire Tolkien. Freely available online.

* A new official free-sample for Drout’s Tolkien and the West five-hour audiobook (2012) which in the UK is currently £14 or free to Amazon’s Audible subscribers.

* A PDF with the full programme for ‘The Undiscovered C.S. Lewis Conference’ in September 2024. The first day will offer some Tolkien-related papers and talks. The conference will also see a stage performance of The Baptized Imagination: Lewis & Tolkien, produced by George Fox University theatre lecturer Ben Tissell.

* Now recorded and online at YouTube, the latest FACTS podcast with guest Holly Ordway, discussing Tolkien’s Faith.

* The latest issue of Leicester University’s Luminary open-access undergraduate journal is Issue 6: ‘Locating Fantastika’. Among others, the article “Palimpsestic and Abject Faerie Spaces and Species” explores two pre-Tolkien British depictions of mortals who trespass into faerie places. Freely available online.

* The UK’s ImagineFX magazine (November 2024 issue) has a four-page ‘making of’ feature, showing the cover art for the new LoTR-based tabletop role-playing game. The game gives the popular Dungeons & Dragons 5e RPG playing system a thorough LoTR makeover. Clueless newbs such as myself would also need the key D&D Player’s Handbook, as there’s said to be a lot of basic D&D combat knowledge being assumed.

* The UK’s annual Heritage Open Days this year includes Exeter College, Oxford, with their date being Sunday 15th September 2024. No pre-booking required, but I imagine that getting in the queue early might be advisable. Note also that, around the corner, “The Bodleian’s letterpress printing workshop will be open for drop-in printing”. There may be even more open and free in Oxford on that day, if you look.

* And finally, the new free open-source AI image-generator Flux can generate images that use distinctive handwriting styles. Of course, someone quickly created a free ‘Flux Tolkien Handwriting’ style-guidance plug-in (a ‘LORA’) for it. This now appears to have been taken down, but some of the sample images are still available to prove that it can be done.

Tolkien Gleanings #231

Tolkien Gleanings #231

* Later in 2024 The Tolkien Society plans a two-day conference (online) to celebrate the centenary of Christopher Tolkien’s birth.

* In the Hungarian journal The Anachronist (Eotvos Lorand University, Budapest), “Tolkien Behind the Iron Curtain and Beyond” reviews the recent book J.R.R. Tolkien in Central Europe. Context, Directions, and the Legacy (2023). In English and freely available online.

* Jessica Yates asks “Who was ‘Mr. Rang’?”. Tolkien wrote a long and important late letter to him, of which the draft survived to be published. A plausible candidate for ‘Rang’ is suggested. The only other (and somewhat unlikely) possibility I can dig up is the acclaimed London surgeon Mercer Rang (1933-2003). He was a leading specialist in healing children’s bone fractures, and from 1967 was in Toronto in Canada. He was also an accomplished non-fiction medical historian and anthologist, and might conceivably have had an interest in the best children’s literature (as an aid to the recovery of his long-term patients). Although I guess Tolkien would have known to address him as “Dr. Rang”.

* In the new book The Bible and Western Christian Literature: Twentieth Century to the Present Day (2024), the chapter “Remythologizing Faith: Biblical Fantasy and the Inklings’ Romantic Theology”.

* Coming soon via the FACTS podcast, another interview with Holly Ordway on her book Tolkien’s Faith.

* In a market town in mid Wales, a local newspaper has a new feature in which “Machynlleth Tolkien collector shares tips” on collecting Tolkien editions. With a picture of his local market stall, which looks worth seeking out should you be passing through on your way to the coast.

* On YouTube, the August 2024 Update for the Digital Tolkien Project.

* And finally, the World Fantasy Convention (who knew?) is to be held in Brighton, 30th October – 2nd November 2025.

Tolkien Gleanings #230

Tolkien Gleanings #230

* “Fatty Bolger, a Local Hero”

“It is tempting to try to save the world, [and local] grassroots terrors are perhaps mere deputies of the boss villains. But their sting is devastating, nonetheless. […] Pippin is the first to recognize the lengths that Fredegar went to fight the Enemy on the home front: “You would have done better to come with us after all, poor old Fredegar!” Perhaps Pippin is right, but none of the friends call Fredegar Fatty anymore, and those chaps know something about heroics.”

Readers will recall that ‘Fatty’ goes (in the background of the story) from being a timid credulous young fellow overly fond of plum-puddings, to leading… “a band of rebels […] up in the Brockenbores by the hills of Scary”.

* New in Spanish in the journal Historia Universal, “From Virgil to Tolkien”. The two men are here pictured as… “two lighthouses that in the midst of [civilisational] darkness became guides to a new approach to national identity”. Freely available online.

* West Point’s Modern War Institute has a new article on “From Middle-earth to Ukraine, the Enduring Value of Wylie’s General Theory of Power Control”. Freely available online. When war in unwinnable or has reached a stalemate on the battlefield, surprising tactics are needed (hobbits, in the case of LoTR, doing the reverse of what the enemy expects). Ideally these new tactics shift the centre-of-gravity of war away from the battlefield, while also holding out the prospect of ensuring a final settlement of lasting political value.

* In France, Vincent Ferre’s Dictionnaire Tolkien has appeared in a third edition (2024). This is “revised and expanded” according to the blurb, and apparently has a number of French summaries of English scholarly works.

* November 2024 at the online Signum University brings the prospect of a short-course on “The Poetic Corpus of J.R.R. Tolkien: The Early Poems 1 (1910-1919)”.

* Some notes on two books of essays recently read, Mark T. Hooker’s Tolkienian Mathomium and Hobbitonian Anthology:

   M. p.26. “OE word bruna was commonly used to name bodies of clear running water, emanating from springs, that flowed over gravelly beds […] related to the German brunnen and Dutch bron, both meaning spring, as in ‘water welling up out of the ground’.”

   M. p.51. “Tolkien says [in an interview] that he sometimes used the Gothic translation of his surname — Dwalakoneis”. In full, Ruginwaldus Dwalakoneis.

   M. pp.220-221. “a number of authors consider that certain aspects of the [Babylonian astro-theological] myth of Astarte/Ishtar [aka Inanna] were co-opted by the Christian church […] for attribution to Mary”. The Encyclopedia Biblica “equates her title ‘Queen of Heaven’ with “a cult of Venus” (IV, 3993)”. See also p.223 for a comparison of women weeping for Tammuz [lover of the Babylonian Venus] and the weeping of women heard by Earendel. I would add that this feature is also present in Egypt in the nightly voyage of Ra-Horus through the Hours of the Night, though it may have been borrowed from Tammuz.

   HA. pp.34-35. A 1932 reprinting of a 17th century list of the predecessors of King Arthur placed a “King Magoth” five generations earlier. Geoffrey of Monmouth had Goemagot as the leader of the giants who inhabited Albion [Britain] before the arrival of the Trojans. Both thought similar to Maggot, re: Farmer Maggot.

   HA. p.96. Brother Hilary’s farm at Evesham grew mostly plums, not apples. Plums then being a far more commonly-eaten fruit than today. I would add that this colours the description… “later they sat on the lawns under the plum-trees and ate, until they had made piles of stones like small pyramids” (Return of the King).

* Renga is hunting down the Cracks of Doom (late 1981), which is thought to have been the first commercial Tolkien computer game. He has also been able to discount the game Middle Earth (1979) as the first such. This game has recently been found and, on playing it on old hardware, it appears to be a Jules Verne-ish ‘journey to the centre of the earth’ type RPG game set in the 1970s/80s. It has no Tolkien connection, other than the misleading title.

* And finally, the British ticket-seller Trainline has a new Web page titled “Tour Tolkien’s England: UK locations that inspired The Lord of the Rings & Middle-earth”. Hasty, but not as cringe inducing as you might expect. Though we do get “University of Birmingham’s Great Hall = The Hall of Elrond”, without any reference to it serving as the hospital to which Tolkien was brought from the battlefields of France. Gondor’s ‘Houses of Healing’ might therefore be a more apt comparison, since Tolkien was never a student there.

However… I see there’s now a Great Hall 360 Virtual Tour, and today one could indeed imagine it as Elrond’s hall.

Tolkien Gleanings #229

Tolkien Gleanings #229

* A partially-online review of The Mythmakers: The Remarkable Fellowship of C.S. Lewis and J.R.R. Tolkien (2024). The reviewer notes…

“the skilled craftsmanship of the book’s visuals. The illustrations, drawn by hand and digitally colored, are masterful balances of details and sweeping, epic scenes, with warm shades of yellow cozying up next to a range of cool, blue hues. Any dialogue is rendered in typefaces based on the handwriting of the author, and this instantly creates a welcoming, insider vibe. Full page spreads, orderly panels, and sections that are primarily text-only all share harmonious space without disrupting the narrative flow, effortlessly blending fantasy and reality.”

* New in the undergraduate journal Eloquentia Perfecta (Fordham University), a lengthy essay exploring Tolkien’s work in relation to “Bilbo and the Consequences of War”.

* From blog notes on the projects of the Oxford Libraries Graduate Trainees

“Leah’s trainee project was a fascinating deep dive into the offprints of Professor Turville-Petre, a prominent Oxford scholar in Old Norse-Icelandic Studies who, as a student at Christ Church, was tutored by none other than J.R.R. Tolkien himself. When Turville-Petre died in 1978, he donated his entire library to the English Faculty Library. [One aim was to look through his huge collection of offprints and to] create a handlist [and there is now] a spreadsheet detailing each offprint. These details included, but were not limited to, author details, publication information, as well as language. Leah also paid close attention to the contents and notes that he made in the margins of the off-prints [which has] proved to be effective in bringing Turville-Petre to life, letting us catch a glimpse of his personality and work style.”

* Previously paywalled, “The Forge of Tolkien” series from Rachel Fulton-Brown. There were 43 episodes in total, for subscribers, issued in 2020-2021. The first six are now freely available on YouTube, or are scheduled to be so very soon…

   1. “What Sort of Tale Have We Fallen Into?”
   2. A Mythology for England
   3. Mythopoeia
   4. Who is Tom Bombadil?
   5. Stories for Children
   6. A Taxonomy of Dragons

* Project Muse now has a Web page for the contents of Tolkien Studies, Volume 20, 2023 ($ paywall, released summer 2024). ($60 + registration required).

* Borromeo at the Birmingham Oratory, in Tolkien’s time there? Hmmm, now that sounds like a familiar name. Found on an old postcard I spotted on eBay…

The possible connection was not addressed in the recent book Tolkien’s Faith.

* And finally, The Gates of Argonath as ‘filmed’ in an advanced game-engine, the latest real-time Unreal Engine 5. No horrid 2000s-style polygonal videogame river-rocks, but the YouTube demo video does have fashionable wobbly camerawork… so beware of sea-sickness.

Tolkien Gleanings #228

Tolkien Gleanings #228

* Exeter College, Oxford, will be hosting a public talk on the “70th Anniversary of The Lord of the Rings”. With Holly Ordway, on 17th October 2024. Tickets available from 9th September. This will be first of another series of eight seminar talks at Exeter College, to be given in person during the Autumn 2024 term. It appears the new series will focus on the initial publication and reception of The Lord of the Rings. No details of topics, as yet. Only the names of the speakers and the dates.

* At The Washington Stand, another fisking of the recent New York Times article which appears to have misunderstood Tolkien…

“Tolkien’s view, expounded throughout his work, is not [as the NYT article claims] that power is evil, but rather that authority is good, and power must be subject to that authority. Aragorn is not evil for seeking dominion over Gondor and Arnor; in fact, that is itself, in Tolkien’s view, a good, because Aragorn has the authority to wield that power: he is the King.”

* A new Masters degree dissertation, “Coining Personal Names to Build Connections among Characters: Lexical Creativity in Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings” (2024). Freely available as a .PDF file.

* Newly posted on YouTube this week, the Lore of the Ring podcast 084: ‘Interview with a Tolkien Journalist, Larry D. Curtis’ (2023).

* “The Inklings Yearbook Goes Open Access” at The Stacks

“Starting with volume 40, the Inklings Yearbook will be published in our online repository, The Stacks. [There you can freely] download all individual texts [or] a PDF of the whole volume. We are currently in the process of digitizing older editions of the Yearbook as well – volumes 23-27 are available in part already…”

* Reading the latest Amon Hen magazine (August 2024), I notice the editors say they are still seeking a Graphic Designer.

* A pleasing if rather sickly-yellow map of the Shire, found freely available to view at Max’s Maps.

* And finally, a new free 1920 x 1080px widescreen wallpaper, ‘Hill End, above Little Delving on the western moors of The Shire’. Free to use, as I’m placing it under ‘Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike’.

Tolkien Gleanings #227

Tolkien Gleanings #227

* A new Masters dissertation, “Reclaiming Stoicism: Aragorn as the Epitome of Healthy Masculinity in the Modern Era” (2024). Freely available online.

* On YouTube, the Chasing Leviathan podcast interviews Dr. Graham McAleer on ‘Tolkien, Philosopher of War’. His book of the same name is set for publication at the start of November 2024. For background, last week The Imaginative Conservative had the article “J.R.R. Tolkien’s Vision of Just War”.

* In Spanish, “Recreacion De Elessar En Art Noveau” (2023/24). An account of a student design project to… “recreate [Aragorn’s green] jewel by creating a design for its illustration, via an analysis and study of the literary descriptions given by Tolkien of the jewel and its materials, as well as an analysis of the symbology of all the elements that represent it.” Currently in a university online repository, but under an unspecified embargo.

* A complete table-of-contents for the long-delayed Tolkien Studies Volume 20… “published in August 2024, but actually being the 2023 issue”. Has the article “The Year’s Work in Tolkien Studies 2020”, and a bibliography for 2021.

* On YouTube, the playlist Wonders of the Wade, with the latest addition to the series being “Wonders of the Wade #15: J.R.R. Tolkien’s desk and pen”.

* New in the journal Studies in Philology, Pearl and the Fairies of Romance: Hermeneutics and Intertextuality in a Fourteenth-Century Religious Dream Vision” ($ paywall). The author… “argues that the Pearl-poet is consciously engaging with readily identifiable fairy themes and motifs” of the period.

* And finally, two online previews of new watercolours to be included in the 2025 Beyond Bree Tolkien Calendar.

Tolkien Gleanings #226

Tolkien Gleanings #226

* Newly added to the latest Journal of Tolkien Research, the first of the issue’s articles. “A Speculative Ethnomusicology of Gondor” is freely available online.

* Just published, a new issue of the open-access SELIM: Journal of the Spanish Society for Medieval English Language and Literature. Includes a review of Tolkien’s The Battle of Maldon Together with the Homecoming of Beorhtnoth (2023). Freely available online.

* The August 2024 issue of Amon Hen, is now available to members ($ paywall). It’s a poetry special, but also has the substantial bio-article “Aragorn: The Early Years”, and a review of Speculative Poetry and the Modern Alliterative Revival, A Critical Anthology (2023).

* The latest issue of Canada’s Catholic Insight magazine, on “Tolkien, Discernment, and Vocation in The Lord of the Rings”. Freely available online.

* On YouTube, the Tolkien Collector’s Guide interviews Australian “Peter Kenny — Tolkien fan, collector, and educator”.

* The delayed OUP book Tolkien on Chaucer, 1913-1959 now has a 17th October 2024 release date, according to Amazon UK. Pre-orders are now being taken. “Bowers and Steffensen reveal how the Reeve’s Tale was a source for Tolkien’s description of Merry and Pippin’s battle with Saruman”, according to the blurb.

* And finally, Cate Blanchett has claimed that “no one got paid anything” for Lord of the Rings movies. Looking briefly at this… I noticed the actor who played Legolas also had “nothing”, according to an interview he did. But it appears that when an actor says “nothing”, they actually mean “$175,000”. Which is what he then admitted to the interviewer that he was paid, as an almost-unknown actor at that time. In today’s money, 1999’s $175k is equivalent to a hefty $330,000. Not bad, for an unknown actor. One would imagine that Blanchett (Galadriel), with more star power but less screen-time and physical work than Legolas, should have had something similar to that. Unless, perhaps, she deliberately worked for free? The total budget for making all three films was reported to be $270m (Variety), which would be about $500m today.

Tolkien Gleanings #225

Tolkien Gleanings #225

* Sessions set for the 2025 International Congress on Medieval Studies, among others, include: “Fire, Dragons, and Jewels, O My: Medieval Poems and J.R.R. Tolkien”; “Tolkien and Old Norse”; and “Tolkien and Medieval Conceptions of the Sea”. The calls are now online.

* The Messengers from the Stars open-access journal seeks contributions for a special issue in 2025 to be themed “‘Getting Medieval’: Fantasy and the Middle Ages”. Deadline: 3rd February 2025.

* Found, another 10-year embargo dissertation for an Irish B.A. (Hons.) Design for Stage and Screen degree. But different from the one noted in Gleanings #224. “The Safe Haven: The depiction of salvation through sanctuary and scenography in The Lord of the Rings” (2014 undergraduate dissertation, released after embargo April 2024). A study of the visual aspects of the archetypal spaces of sanctuary with reference to LoTR. Identifies architectural methods that “creatively retain what threatens to disappear”, and considers the presentation of salvation “via ornamentation and embellishment”. Freely available online, and under Creative Commons.

* The Federalist magazine fisks a newspaper journalist who “Completely Botches Lord Of The Rings”… “It is untenable to equate the Ring simply with power. Tolkien did not write a story about why power is evil, but about why domination is evil. To understand Tolkien, it is essential to distinguish between the two.” Freely available online.

* On YouTube in Italian, “Fear leads to suffering”: myth and hope in the subcreation of J.R.R. Tolkien”. A May 2024 conference interview with Eduardo Segura at the University of Granada, Spain.

* In Brazil and in Brazilian, International Meeting for Mythopoetic Studies: The Lord of the Rings – 70 years of The Fellowship of the Ring, a three-day conference held in July 2024. The programme is still freely online as a PDF. The talks included, among others…

   – From heavenly Jerusalem to Gondolin: hermeneutics of applicability: Tolkieniana as contemplation of celestial realities.

   – Narrative solutions to editorial problems in The Fellowship of the Ring.

   – Pseudotranslation as a creative principle of The Lord of the Rings.

   – How medieval is Middle-earth? Understanding medievalism based on the works of J.R.R. Tolkien.

   – What about second breakfast? Food and eating habits of the hobbits in The Lord of the Rings.

* A new set of Tolkien scene paintings by Miriam Ellis, posted in July 2024 on DeviantArt.

* And finally, an ‘Ink of Ages’ contest from the World History Encyclopedia with Oxford University Press. Submit your “historical or mythology-inspired short fiction”, telling a story in English in “under 2,000 words”, by 15th September 2024. Free to enter. No mention of AI assistance being allowed, or not.

Tolkien Gleanings #224

Tolkien Gleanings #224

* The Leo Carruthers book Tolkien et la religion: Comme une lampe invisible (‘Tolkien and Religion: An invisible lamp’) is to be (re?)published by the Sorbonne shortly, and apparently runs to a chunky 340 pages. This suggests an expanded edition, compared to the page count of the earlier 2016 edition, but that’s just my guess. Amazon UK currently lists the book for publication on the 12th September 2024. [Update: Yes, I’m right. The Sorbonne list it as a “2ème édition”, 2nd edition].

* Another conference paper, newly added to the latest Journal of Tolkien Research, “Tolkien’s Orphaned Heroes: Kullervo, Hurin and the Limits of Fostering”. Freely available online.

* “A Lord of More Renown than Arthur: Tolkien’s Corrective and Compensatory Approach to the Arthurian Tradition in his Legendarium”. A lengthy non-fiction item in a new undergraduate collection from The University of Price Edward Island in Canada, titled Into a New Tongue. This being the UPEI Arts Review edition for Spring 2024. Freely available online.

* From the Institute of Art, Design + Technology, Ireland, Authentic Fantasy: The representation of the Shire as a nostalgic arcadia (2013 with a 10-year embargo, freely online April 2024). Being an undergraduate dissertation for a B.A. (Hons.) Design for Stage and Screen degree, “a study of the visual and design references within the Shire in the film adaption of The Lord of the Rings“. The core focusses…

“on the Victorian era from which Tolkien drew inspiration in creating the Shire and its characters. Director Peter Jackson and conceptual designers use this era strongly as a reference within their research and design methodologies, and the study explores how, although we are looking at the Victorian era, there is a strong use of medievalism within the design reflecting the influence of the medieval period on Victorian art and aesthetics.”

* Signum University’s October 2024 modules are now listed. Note the eight-session course “The Music of Middle-earth”, and also the unusual “Ink Spots and Tea Stains: What we Learn from C.S. Lewis’s Writing Habits”. Booking now.

* Oxford is to host another repeat of Tolkien’s ‘Lecture on Dragons’. This time it will be staged at The Story Museum in Oxford, on the 22nd September 2024. Free, and booking now. Tolkien originally gave this lecture on New Year’s Day 1938 at the University Museum, Oxford, as part of the Museum’s Christmas lecture series for children. In 2024 its recreation will be… “Presented by Professor John Holmes, [who will] re-run Tolkien’s lecture featuring his original slides.”

* The Arkhaven Nights podcast is to interview Rachel Fulton Brown. Scheduled for Friday 9th August 2024. Also, it appears that Fulton Brown’s huge Tolkien lecture series, previously paywalled, may be going free. I’ll post more on that later, once a few more free recordings are posted.

* And finally, Sami Makkonen’s gritty 300-page graphic-novel adaptation of The Kalevala is still sticking to its 24th September 2024 release-date for the English translation. Preview pages are now floating around the Internet. His workflow is to ink the page manually, with marker pens on board. Then to scan the page, to be able to digitally colour and tweak it in the computer.

Tolkien Gleanings #223

Tolkien Gleanings #223

* Added to the latest edition of Journal of Tolkien Research, a new review of the book Germanic Heroes, Courage, and Fate: Northern Narratives of J.R.R. Tolkien’s Legendarium (2024).

* The UK’s latest Country Life magazine has an article on the wealth of Tolkien letters currently up for sale. No paywall on this article, at least for me.

* “Tolkien: A Thoroughly Modern Medievalist”, a new episode of a one-hour podcast which discusses the links between “faith and beauty”. This episode “featuring Dr. Holly Ordway” for a wide-ranging discussion on Tolkien in historical and national context.

He’s extremely English, and he has very English habits of expression. Which include at times being extremely hyperbolic, and at other times being extremely understated […] I’ve been spending a lot of time in England, for more than a decade now. It sunk in gradually that the English, for all they have outwardly similar appearances to Americans, are very different from Americans. [Tolkien’s English / West Midlands / Oxford manner] has made it extra puzzling for Americans in particular to puzzle Tolkien out.

Since his hyperbolic comments, largely meant to be amusingly offhand and/or playfully conversation-provoking, have sometimes been taken literally. Tolkien’s mumbling, and the nature of printed-word interviews conducted by journalists, also means that the vital role that intonation plays in English speech is missed.

* Also new on YouTube, the Digital Tolkien project offers advice on “How to use Search Tolkien and Cite Tolkien”.

* At Word on Fire, “Celebrating the Epochal Publication of The Fellowship of the Ring 70 Years On”.

* New to me, an abstract for an ambitious undergraduate dissertation from Bangladesh, “Beyond the Walls of Night: Completing Tolkien’s Untold Armageddon”. In English, from 2021…

“Despite the copious amount of notes that Tolkien left behind, no definitive conclusion to this narrative has been released by the Tolkien Estate so far. Various hints and clues, however, have been scattered by the author [and thus the dissertation attempts] to compile into a coherent conclusion [the extant details of the] Final Battle [in which, as prophesied] the world would be destroyed and renewed.”

* And finally, scholars may be interested in easy bulk-backup of a list of precious Web URLs, using the cryptically named Save Page WE. This is the only Windows desktop freeware I know of that can take a .TXT list of URLs, and work through them automatically, saving each URL (Web page) as an encapsulated archival .MHTML file. If you have 100s to save, be sure to first tick ‘Close tab after saving page’ in Settings or you’ll run out of system memory. Free for Chrome-based Web browsers.