Festival in the Shire 2010
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Merry
- Varda
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marbretherese
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Good, because we are absolutely obsessed with writing them!!
we count ourselves as very lucky to have all this stuff going on nearby, and can't resist telling you all about it . . .
"Torment in the dark was the danger that I feared, and it did not hold me back.
But I would not have come, had I known the danger of light and joy."
http://www.marbretherese.com
http://marbretherese.blogspot.com/
But I would not have come, had I known the danger of light and joy."
http://www.marbretherese.com
http://marbretherese.blogspot.com/
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Iolanthe
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Thank you for picking up the report baton, Marbretherese! You are right, we have to finish the Festival off properly before we dive into the many delights of Oxonmoot. Lots of treats to come
!
I'll be good on Friday and go through my notes for the last day to see if there is anything to add to those wonderful talks, but as you were talking more notes than me I doubt I'll have much more. I was starting to suffer from Delegates Drift
. I do have quite a few more photos, though.
I'll be good on Friday and go through my notes for the last day to see if there is anything to add to those wonderful talks, but as you were talking more notes than me I doubt I'll have much more. I was starting to suffer from Delegates Drift
Now let the song begin! Let us sing together
Of sun, stars, moon and mist, rain and cloudy weather...
Of sun, stars, moon and mist, rain and cloudy weather...
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marbretherese
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that's good, because as you can see, I don't!!Iolanthe wrote: I do have quite a few more photos, though.
"Torment in the dark was the danger that I feared, and it did not hold me back.
But I would not have come, had I known the danger of light and joy."
http://www.marbretherese.com
http://marbretherese.blogspot.com/
But I would not have come, had I known the danger of light and joy."
http://www.marbretherese.com
http://marbretherese.blogspot.com/
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Iolanthe
- Uinen
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- Location: Washing my hair in the Sundering Sea
Festival in the Shire

Mooching about the Mall with Rodney Matthews in the background
Last day... or all good things must come to an end
Mooching about the Mall with Rodney Matthews in the background
© Iolanthe
Last day... or all good things must come to an end
Well - I've finally got around to my account of the last day of the Festival. I didn't think I'd have much to add, but it turns out that I have. I hunted through my notes and eureka! I went to a talk that Marbretherese and Jonick missed while they were gadding about Aberystwith and getting themselves lost. Simon Eckstein gave an interesting paper on Welsh Modernism in Tolkien’s Works, gamely sticking to the Conference theme. He was looking at analogies between Tolkien’s desire to create England’s lost Anglo Saxon mythology and Welsh modernist authors like David Jones, who had a similar longing for an absent culture. In Welsh there is a word for this cultural longing – hiraeth. This is peculiarly Welsh longing for a lost home that a Welshman may be separated from by time or by space. There is no equivalent word in the English language and is very different from just plain old home sickness. It is more of a spiritual connection than nostalgia. As I come from Welsh parents and cry like a baby every time I hear ‘Feed me, oh thy Great Jehovah’ even though I’ve never lived in Wales, I guess it must be something in it.
Eckstein wasn’t suggesting that Tolkien had read Welsh modernists, just that there were parallels. Like Tolkien, Jones saw the Norman invasion as the death of Welsh culture, with French and Latin becoming the language of education. Eckstein pointed out that Tolkien’s longing is even one step further from the source because Welsh is still a living language, whereas Tolkien is turning back to a mythology and tradition in a language that is no longer the language of the country the traditions are rooted in. Tolkien’s longing was both mythic and linguistic.
We finally find the Blue Wizards...
© Iolanthe
Verlyn Flieger’s talk on Politically Incorrect Tolkien was a hoot. After making us move our chairs so that we were all sitting around in a circle (even Tom Shippey) she dealt with the important issue of political correctness in Tolkien’s characters, while stirring the pot and often being quite outrageous. It was wonderful. She mentioned the smug parochialism of the Shire and said it was a ‘nice place but you wouldn’t want to live there.’ Ted Sandyman was a typical Hobbit and pointed out that Hobbits in general don’t even believe in fairies. Everyone outside the Shire is ‘queer’. Even Buckland and Bag End is ‘queer.
Verlyn tells it like it is...
© Iolanthe
John Garth’s reading of Gilson’s letters was extremely moving. It was a very profound experience and not only for us, but for John Garth himself and Gilson’s niece. If the letters are ever published I recommend reading them for yourselves.
I didn’t take notes at the final panel discussion – I think I was just completely overwhelmed by the array of luminaries in front of us – but I did take a photo so that you can be overwhelmed too:
Left to right: Corey Olsen, Dimitra Fimi, John Garth, Verlyn Flieger,
Tom Shippey, Colin Duriez, Alex Lewis (hidden), Colin Manlove and Ruth Lacon
© Iolanthe
Ted singing
© Iolanthe
Now let the song begin! Let us sing together
Of sun, stars, moon and mist, rain and cloudy weather...
Of sun, stars, moon and mist, rain and cloudy weather...
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Philipa
- Ulmo
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Iolanthe
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marbretherese
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You're getting mixed up with the Oxenmoot reports, Iolanthe. You did actually finish telling everyone about theFestival in the Shire - eventually 
"Torment in the dark was the danger that I feared, and it did not hold me back.
But I would not have come, had I known the danger of light and joy."
http://www.marbretherese.com
http://marbretherese.blogspot.com/
But I would not have come, had I known the danger of light and joy."
http://www.marbretherese.com
http://marbretherese.blogspot.com/