Tolkien Gleanings #217
* The French journal Rencontres No. 612 (spring 2024) is themed around Tolkien et l’Antiquite (‘Tolkien and antiquity’). I see it can now be had via Amazon UK and with UK shipping. Note that single chapter PDFs can also be purchased on the publisher’s site for a few $s, thus opening an easy route to affordable auto-translation. Titles, in English translation:
– The Third Age as Medium Aevum.
– The Vergilian Golden Age in Tolkien’s Legendarium. [in English]
– “All … that walk the world in these after-days”: Classical Receptions as Gothic ‘Haunting’ in J.R.R. Tolkien. [in English]
– The Language of Knowledge: The Influence of Latin on Quenya by J.R.R. Tolkien.
– Vestiges of Antiquity among Hobbits.
– From Babylon to Numenor: The Reception of Near Eastern Antiquity and the use of Akkadian sources in the work of J.R.R. Tolkien.
– Rome in Middle-earth: Echoes of a Past to Come.
– Velleda and Galadriel, the Antiquities of Chateaubriand and Tolkien.
* Publisher McFarland plans a new monograph series under the title ‘Critical Explorations in Tolkien Studies’. This sounds to me like it might start publishing in 2026, since this week the editor states that… “The series will open for proposals in 2025 after I assemble an advisory board.” McFarland produce a vast range, and they have developed a questionable reputation for their fan / genre studies books, with some items being excellent while others are dire. But hopefully some firm editorship will keep this new Tolkien series on an even keel.
* An M.A. dissertation from the University of Toronto, Shakespeare’s Faerie Art of Enchantment through Tolkien’s Lens: A Historiographical Introduction (November 2022). Freely available online.
* Don’t know where to start with The Silmarillion? Forthcoming from Signum Press is…
“a bit of ‘popular scholarship’ called The Silmarillion Primer. This is the revised and upgraded version of the Primer that first appeared on Tor.com back in 2017. […] yes, [after much revision] it will be a real book! — published through Signum Press.”
* Online and zoom-able as a large crisp scan, the large-sheet Ordnance Survey Map of Britain in the Dark Ages (1965 edition).
The more attractive 1939 edition, showing woodland as well as elevation, is on Archive.org as a poor scan.
One assumes Tolkien had a copy of the two 1939 editions (‘South’ and ‘North’ separately, the latter being effectively Scotland). I recall having a later Dark Ages O.S. map when I was a lad, but these earlier editions were discovered via the long article “On ‘Tom Bombadil and the Anti-Matter of England'”, from the Institute of Intellectual History, St. Andrews, UK. This 2020 article addresses, at length, the important intellectual historian Professor J.G.A. Pocock’s misunderstandings of Tolkien in his essay “Tom Bombadil and the Anti-Matter of England”, in terms of the frameworks of what Pocock termed “paleo-English” prehistory.
* From Reactor magazine this week, a quick popular guide-article on “Tracing the Origins of Modern Fantasy in Five Classic Viking Tales”, with the article also suggesting accessible translations.
* In Catholic 365 this week, an article on why “Aragorn’s Coronation Needs the Priesthood”…
“Aragorn’s kingship only follows the priestly act of Frodo carrying the ring to Mount Doom. Aragorn wisely recognizes this, and will not accept his kingship without acknowledging its dependence on the priestly work of Frodo and the prophetic leadership of Gandalf. [… yet the film adaptation] removes Frodo’s participation in the coronation”
* The latest Ecozon@: European Journal of Literature, Culture and Environment is a themed issued on ‘Plant Tendrils in Children’s and Young Adult Literature’. The journal is freely available online. Nothing specifically tree-ish in the Tolkien sense, but the book review of Animal Soundscapes in Anglo-Norman Texts may interest. The book…
“successfully identifies a broadly shared Anglo-Norman understanding of animals and humans as creatures with ineluctably shared destinies. As the chapter on St. Francis makes especially clear, humans and animals become subjects by making meaning through the production of noise, song, and sound.”
* And finally, Harvard Magazine reports “Harvard Lampoon Donates Historic Materials to University Archives”. Including the paperback Bored of the Rings, the 1969 student parody of LoTR.













