.As Tolkien said in relation to Wagner, a somewhat tenous link, the similarities start and end with the rotundity of the rings.Original is what sense? Have you read his primary texts? in terms of originality it is best to contrast him with someone who drew from the same sources, the great Opera composer and librettist, Richard Wagner. Wagner's version is primarily about the conflict between the characters. He had borrowed more aspects of the plot from other sources than Tolkien had, but had created genuine characters, and believable conflict within his fantasy world. Wagner's Ring is character driven. Each character is a representation of his society, and the plot creates a commentary. Wagner's Wotan, compared to Gandalf is cruel, selfish, flawed, brutal, lecherous, violent, yet at the same time, shares the wisdom in common. He is far more believable than his Tolkienian equal in the sense that he has negative qualities, and personal flaws.![]()
When you talk about 'genuine' and 'believable', I do not understand what you mean, such abstractions are merely parochial laws to reflect arbitrary definitions of character "believability"-taking to extremes, or even moderately, it leads to mediocre Maupaussant naturalism, realism and other such gash. So, according to your logic, so long as a character exhibits negative characteristics then he becomes what you would call "realistic"-a ridiculous, Dostoevskiaan form of characterisation.
To say that Gandalf does not have what you would call "personal flaws" also denotes a clumsy reading of the text. He is, or can be, grumpy and sharp-tongued-yes he does not commit mass rapes like every literary character seemingly should do, but he not without his flaws of judgement (in relation to Saruman) and of action. He is, by the way, the wisest character in the Lord of the Rings, so that would go someway in explaining why he is so "good" morally. He is no less believable than say, Charles Bovary or Leopold Bloom, sexual idiosyncrasies aside
The contention that Wagner is able to create a character which "represents society" is equally banal-how can an abstractive work of art, create characters who, magically, represent a whole group of people? Art is art and life is life, classifying people or races via art is a ridiculous way of looking at things.
Works which rely on 'great ideas', the cant of Kant etc. are often tendentious and platitudinous in the extreme.
So?Tolkien on the other hand relied primarily on plot.
His characters too are primarily borrowed, but his plot is more original (though in no way original).![]()
Even when Tolkien is original he is not original? Fantastic!
Archaic-yes, boring-thay is your own opinion. As for mimicking texts-does Joyce not do that for a large part of Ulysses? Flaubert, Ibsen, sports journalism, romance novels etc. Joyce's pastiches are parodic but that does not take away from the fact that many of the greatest writers write in a similar way to predecessors and contemporaneous writers, Katherine Mansfield mimics Chekov but that doesn't make her short stories any less brilliant.His prose is mimicking the texts he drew on as well, being both archaic and boring.
Thank your for informing me about the proliferation of Turkish markets in Middle-Earth a fact which I was hitherto unaware of.They have no personalities, and often stop at the most bazaar times to do the most predictable things.
They do have personalities actually, multi-faceted ones, they are there is you read them close enough. Frodo fails in his quest, Boromir tries to steal the ring, Sam and all other hobbits are by and large ignorant and narrow-minded, though essentially charming, Saruman falls, the two main heroic 'races' in Tolkien's myth, the Numenoreans and the Noldor, were both arrogant. (their greatest strength and weakness)
The men in Middle-Earth are no more or less realistic or true-to-life than any characters in other novels, or, as Tolkien said, they do not represent anything which men cannot and do not aspire to in the "real world". It is no more or less realistic than say the perpetual eruditity of Stephen Dedalaus.
Tolkien is a very good writer, a very good describer, especially of nature; some of his passages are magnificently beautiful, LoTR is interspersed with passages of aesthetic beauty.
He pretty much created the modern fantasy lit. movement, yes he was influenced by "older legends" but he was able to rework them to his own ends-just as Joyce was able to rework Dujardin's concepts in Ulysses-to say that he created nothing original is to reduce novels to the bunkum of great ideas, in which case what did Joyce create, being uninterested in them?Did he advance the genre of fantasy beyond where it had been before? many would answer yes, but since if you read his primary sources, you can see that he really created nothing that had not been done before, sometimes way before, we can only answer one way, No
He created a new way of writing and describing worlds of inventing races and characters and languages. Tolkien was brilliant linguist and fictional creator-his oeuvre contained a variety of new languages, of races, states and history. Tolkien created an entire world in that mediocre brain of his.
Oh please. I never knew fans enjoy reading terribly written books. Tolkien was a philologist and had a fine prose style.no, many readers, even fans, agree his prose is dreadful



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