Reconsidering Tolkien: Difference between revisions
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* [[Jean-Christophe Dufau]]: "Mythic Space in Tolkien's Work" | * [[Jean-Christophe Dufau]]: "Mythic Space in Tolkien's Work" | ||
* [[Dirk Vanderbeke]]: "Language, Lore and Learning in The Lord of the Rings" | * [[Dirk Vanderbeke]]: "Language, Lore and Learning in The Lord of the Rings" | ||
* [[Martin Simonson]]: "The Lord of the Rings in the Wake of the Great War: | * [[Martin Simonson]]: "The Lord of the Rings in the Wake of the Great War: War, Poetry, Modernism, and Ironic Myth" | ||
War, Poetry, Modernism, and Ironic Myth" | |||
* [[Connie Veugen]]: "'A Man, lean, dark, tall': Aragorn Seen Through Different Media". This essay can be read ''[http://dare.ubvu.vu.nl/bitstream/1871/10975/1/Aragorn_Final.pdf here]''. | * [[Connie Veugen]]: "'A Man, lean, dark, tall': Aragorn Seen Through Different Media". This essay can be read ''[http://dare.ubvu.vu.nl/bitstream/1871/10975/1/Aragorn_Final.pdf here]''. | ||
Revision as of 11:43, 6 July 2008
Reconsidering Tolkien | |
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Author | Thomas M. Honegger (editor) |
Publisher | Walking Tree Publisher |
Released | April 15, 2005 |
Format | paperback |
Pages | 212 |
ISBN | 3905703009 |
Reconsidering Tolkien is the eight book of Walking Tree's Cormarë Series. It is a collection of several essays.
Contents
- Marion Gymnich: "Reconsidering the Linguistics of Middle-earth: Invented Languages and Other Linguistic Features in J.R.R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings"
- Eduardo Segura and Guillermo Peris: "Tolkien as Philo-Logist"
- Thomas M. Honegger: "Tolkien Through the Eyes of a Mediaevalist"
- Paul E. Kerry: "Thoughts on J.R.R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings and History"
- Nataša Tučev: "The Knife, the Sting and the Tooth: Manifestations of Shadow in The Lord of the Rings"
- Jean-Christophe Dufau: "Mythic Space in Tolkien's Work"
- Dirk Vanderbeke: "Language, Lore and Learning in The Lord of the Rings"
- Martin Simonson: "The Lord of the Rings in the Wake of the Great War: War, Poetry, Modernism, and Ironic Myth"
- Connie Veugen: "'A Man, lean, dark, tall': Aragorn Seen Through Different Media". This essay can be read here.