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      Tolkien the Medievalist
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      Book

      Tolkien the Medievalist

      DOI link for Tolkien the Medievalist

      Tolkien the Medievalist book

      Tolkien the Medievalist

      DOI link for Tolkien the Medievalist

      Tolkien the Medievalist book

      Edited ByJane Chance
      Edition 1st Edition
      First Published 2002
      eBook Published 12 September 2002
      Pub. Location London
      Imprint Routledge
      DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203218013
      Pages 312
      eBook ISBN 9780203218013
      Subjects Humanities, Language & Literature
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      Chance, J. (Ed.). (2002). Tolkien the Medievalist (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203218013

      ABSTRACT

      Interdisciplinary in approach, Tolkien the Medievalist provides a fresh perspective on J. R. R. Tolkien's Medievalism. In fifteen essays, eminent scholars and new voices explore how Professor Tolkien responded to a modern age of crisis - historical, academic and personal - by adapting his scholarship on medieval literature to his own personal voice. The four sections reveal the author influenced by his profession, religious faith and important issues of the time; by his relationships with other medievalists; by the medieval sources that he read and taught, and by his own medieval mythologizing.

      TABLE OF CONTENTS

      chapter 1|12 pages

      Introduction

      ByJA N E CHANCE

      part |1 pages

      PART I J. R. R. Tolkien as a medieval scholar: modern contexts

      chapter 2|11 pages

      “An industrious little devil”: E. V. Gordon as friend and collaborator with Tolkien DOUGLAS A . ANDERSON

      chapter 3|10 pages

      “There would always be a fairy-tale”: J. R. R. Tolkien and the folklore controversy

      ByVER LY N FLIEGER

      chapter 4|14 pages

      A Kind of mid-wife: J. R. R. Tolkien and C. S. Lewis – sharing influence

      ByANDREW LAZO

      chapter 5|13 pages

      “I wish to speak”: Tolkien’s voice in his Beowulf essay M A RY FA R AC I

      chapter 6|30 pages

      Middle-earth, the Middle Ages, and the Aryan nation: myth and history in World War II

      ByCHRISTINE CHISM

      part |1 pages

      PART II J. R. R. Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings and medieval literary and mythological texts/contexts

      chapter 7|11 pages

      ` Tolkien’s Wild Men: from medieval to modern

      ByVER LY N FLIEGER

      chapter 8|27 pages

      The valkyrie reflex in J. R. R. Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings: LESLIE A . DON OVA N

      ByGaladriel, Shelob, Éowyn, and Arwen

      chapter 9|22 pages

      Exilic imagining in The Seafarer and The Lord of the Rings MIRAN DA WILC OX

      chapter 10|14 pages

      “Oathbreakers, Why Have Ye Come?”: Tolkien’s “Passing of the Grey Company” and the twelfth-century Exercitus mortuorum

      part |1 pages

      PART III J. R. R. Tolkien: The texts/contexts of medieval patristics, theology, and iconography

      chapter 11|12 pages

      Augustine in the cottage of lost play: the Ainulindalë as asterisk cosmogony

      chapter 12|11 pages

      The “music of the spheres”: relationships between Tolkien’s The Silmarillion and medieval cosmological and religious theory

      ByBRADFORD LEE EDEN

      chapter 13|31 pages

      The anthropology of Arda: creation, theology, and the race of Men

      chapter 14|12 pages

      “A land without stain”: medieval images of Mary and their use in the characterization of Galadriel

      ByMICHAEL W. MAHER , S . J.

      part |1 pages

      PART IV J. R. R. Tolkien’s Silmarillion mythology: medievalized retextualization and theory

      chapter 15|20 pages

      The great chain of reading: (inter-)textual relations and the technique of mythopoesis in the Túrin story G E RG E LY NAG Y

      chapter 16|9 pages

      Real-world myth in a secondary world: mythological aspects in the story of Beren and Lúthien

      ByRICHARD C . WEST
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