Posted: Thu Mar 05, 2009 9:37 pm
marbretherese wrote:I love the illustration, too. And when I first read the piece you posted, Phiipa, I read "bugler" as "burglar" , which brings it's own connotations!![]()
It’s a dangerous business, Frodo, going out of your door…You step into the Road, and if you don’t keep your feet, there is no knowing where you might be swept off to.
http://www.middle-earth-journeys.com/forums/
http://www.middle-earth-journeys.com/forums/viewtopic.php?t=49
marbretherese wrote:I love the illustration, too. And when I first read the piece you posted, Phiipa, I read "bugler" as "burglar" , which brings it's own connotations!![]()
Yet another surreal moment (thanks, JRRT)
This morning my son and daughter were playing "Mama warg, baby warg." Yes, they were pretending that they were bloodthirsty super-wolves, ravening through Middle-earth (though mostly it seems they were making "dens" by draping blankets over the furniture).
So I asked them, "What are your names? Bone-gnasher and Blood-fang?"
Son: "I'm Cookie."
Daughter: "My name is Patches."
© Michael Drout
Exploring Tolkien: There and Back Again
April 8th, 2009 by xoanon
Cardiff University LogoCardiff University is offering an on-line course on Tolkien taught in 10 weekly units by Dr Dimitra Fimi. The course has already run twice this academic year and will run once more in the summer semester 2009, starting on 27 April 2009.
The students will be able to explore Tolkien’s Middle-earth from their home, in their own time. They will examine the vast mythology behind The Lord of the Rings and gain a thorough knowledge of Tolkien’s fiction and its creation by focusing on The Hobbit, The Lord of the Rings, The Silmarillion and The Children of Húrin.
The course will focus on the northern European mythologies that inspired Tolkien’s Middle-earth, especially the creative uses of his sources in Old Norse mythology, Celtic myths and legends, Classical mythology, Shakespeare, and the literary tradition.
The students of this online course will also learn about Tolkien’s ‘invented languages’, their origins and sources, and they will examine Tolkien’s work in its historical context through intellectual history, focusing on the ‘races’ and cultures of Middle-earth.
The students will also have the opportunity to participate in a lively Discussion Board moderated by Dr Fimi and they will have full access to Cardiff University’s electronic resources (including such electronic journals as Tolkien Studies and Mythlore and a great number of e-book and reference collections). For those students who are already enrolled in academic programmes, there is the option of doing this course for credits to be used towards their Higher Education Qualifications.
We are also very happy to announce that we can now accept online enrolments for this course.
-To find out more visit the main web page of the course here.
-For Frequently Asked Questions about the course here.
-For an outline of the topics covered in the 10 Units of the course visit here.
See also the tutor’s academic website at: dimtra fimi.com
© Tor.N
Dear Amazon.com Customer,
We've noticed that customers who have purchased or rated The Silmarillion - Thirty Years On (Cormare Series) by Allan, G Turner have also purchased The Legend of Sigurd and Gudrun by J.R.R. Tolkien. For this reason, you might like to know that The Legend of Sigurd and Gudrun will be released on May 5, 2009. You can pre-order yours at a savings of $8.84 by following the link below.
The Legend of Sigurd and Gudrun
J.R.R. Tolkien
List Price: $26.00
Price: $17.16
You Save: $8.84 (34%)
Release Date: May 5, 2009
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Product Description
The Legend of Sigurd and Gudrún is a previously unpublished work by J.R.R. Tolkien, written while Tolkien was Professor of Anglo-Saxon at Oxford during the 1920s and ‘30s, before he wrote The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings. It makes available for the first time Tolkien’s extensive retelling in English narrative verse of the epic Norse tales of Sigurd the Völsung and The Fall of the Niflungs. It includes an introduction by J.R.R. Tolkien, drawn from one of his own lectures on Norse literature, with commentary and notes on the poems by Christopher Tolkien.
Tolkien breaks silence over JRR's 'fierce, passionate' poem
JRR Tolkien's son Christopher admits the poetic form of his father's latest book, Sigurd and Gudrún, may 'put off' many Lord of the Rings fans
The reclusive son of JRR Tolkien has broken his silence to admit fears that fans of his father's work may be "put off" by the verse form of his latest posthumous publication. Responding via fax to a series of questions about The Legend of Sigurd and Gudrún, published for the first time today, Christopher Tolkien expressed the hope that it would show a different side to the author of the much-loved classic The Lord of the Rings.
The 500-stanza poem is closely modelled on the Elder Edda, a collection of Norse myths preserved in a 13th-century manuscript, a pedigree Christopher Tolkien described as "unknown territory" for most people.
"I dare say that a good many will be instantly put off by the very idea of 'long narrative poems in verse' and pursue it no further," he said. It was equally possible that their form will lend them an "unexpected impact," he continued.
"My hope is that some of those who appreciate and admire the works of my father will find it illuminating in respect of Old Norse poetry in general, in his own treatment of the fierce, passionate and mysterious legend, and in this further and little known aspect of him as both philologist and poet. Above all I hope they will take pleasure in this poetry."
Christopher Tolkien, who as a child was paid two pence by his father for every mistake he could find in The Hobbit, and as an RAF pilot during the war contributed suggestions to the progress of The Lord of the Rings, worked from a manuscript which he believes his father wrote in the early 1930s. JRR Tolkien taught Old Norse alongside Anglo-Saxon at Oxford university, giving lectures and classes on Norse language and literature for at least 13 years.
Telling in verse the story of Sigurd the Völsung and the fall of the Niflungs – also adapted by Wagner into the Ring cycle – The Legend of Sigurd and Gudrún sees the hero Sigurd kill the dragon Fafnir (a slaying which may have influenced Tolkien's writing of Bilbo's encounter with Smaug in The Hobbit), take his gold and rescue the Valkyrie Brynhild from her imprisonment on a rock surrounded by fire. Love, magic, jealousy, and, eventually, tragedy in the murder of Sigurd and the suicide of Brynhild ensue.
"My father left one manuscript, and that was complete; there were no more than a few pages of earlier writings, and all other drafting has disappeared. The manuscript is in good clear handwriting, written out without corrections, and obviously intended to be a final fair copy. A few minor changes were made to it much later," said Tolkien, who was appointed as his father's literary executor and has over the past 36 years devoted himself to editing and publishing his father's unpublished works, including The Silmarillion and a 12-volume History of Middle-Earth. "My 'editing' consists very largely of explanation and clarification."
Tolkien, 84, has lived in France since 1975, where wild rumours have suggested that he guards his property from obsessive fans of his father's work with a wild boar – a canard he dismissed as nonsense. "In the full form of the story I keep not one, but a whole troop of wild boars, expressly in order to chase off Tolkien fans who are imagined to lurk in the woods that surround my house," he said. "There are indeed many wild boars in these parts, but I don't think they would be at all suitable as guardians even if I wanted them."
Two years ago Tolkien completed and published his father's unfinished tale of Middle-Earth The Children of Húrin, which went on to sell more than 1m copies in English.
Speculating about what his father, who died in 1973 aged 81, would have made of his immense popularity today – over 150m copies of The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings have sold worldwide – Tolkien said he "might have been in turns delighted, charmed, amused, puzzled, disquieted, baffled, indignant, but, finally, comprehensively astounded".
© Guardian News & media ltd 2009
There's also a Guardian Q&A with Christopher Tolkien here.Honestly, I am not so much into the myth genre. I do like them, but to read such a long one seems tough for me to do right now. Sometime when I'm feeling scholarly maybe I'll attempt it.Merry wrote:
From what I understand, it seems pretty favorable. I'm still not sure I'm going to buy the book. Will you?