I think Evisse has just put into words my feeling on the subject. Regardless of personal opinions on homosexuality, slash, fanfiction in general, the matter comes down to whether or not ones cares about what Tolkien would think of the derivative work. From what I know of Tolkien (having reads his books and the Letters) I am fairly certain he would not approve. I can't say 100% certain simply because I cannot come up with a quote that outright disapproves of the exact things discussed here. I am not particularly interested in turning the thread into a “Would Tolkien approve of homosexuality?” debate, but if any strong proof that he would is presented, I wouldn’t complain. But as things stand, I just don’t believe he would. So in that case, anything so blatantly against his values is disrespectful and I don't see anything around it, no matter how serious or circumspect a certain story is. (This is similar to the way movieFaramir still bothers me because I don’t think the filmmakers can satisfactorily explain going diametrically opposite to Tolkien’s acknowledged feelings about the character, even if the EE makes him a more sympathetic sort).
I may not be one to talk. I haven't written slash, but I have written unabashed parody which I would not dare fool myself into thinking Tolkien would like.

Still, I’m not saying it is anything but a parody. An acknowledged mockery. I don’t think you can honestly go
against Tolkien’s morals using his actual characters, without disrespecting the man’s story. I certainly don’t mind a bit of irreverence. But let’s call it what it is.
Another disclaimer: the only LotR slash I have read has been casual and comedic. I haven’t read Maril’s or Encaitare’s and don’t seek to insult either of you as writers.

Like Evisse, I just don’t see as how Sophocles or Beowulf or world mythology in general really proves the point that slash can be a serious addition to Tolkien’s novels. Especially since they are just that: novels. Culturally significant novels, surely, but still the work and property of one man,
based on established archtypes and myths, not a new myth itself. That, in my opinion, makes it less malleable, as Evisse points out:
Quote:
But here we have a work that is the product of an intelectual mind who knew exactly where he was going with his characters and subject matter. Everything in Tolkien's world falls into place like a perfected piece of a giant puzzle.
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But who knows. Maybe one hundred or hundreds of years from now the “Tolkien” in LotR will be considerably blurred. I can certainly believe that
newly invented homosexual characters could inhabit the world of Middle-earth, since whether you believe it to be right, natural, moral etc. or not, people all over the world do it and always have. So they would almost certainly exist, especially considering M-E as a fictional pre-history.
I think that if Tolkien were to write a homosexual character he would not make him the hero or condone the behavior, but if the populace ever truly absorbs LotR as a myth in and of itself, very few will know or care about that. But we have so many things documented about Tolkien that I doubt people could really distance him that much from his books unless they were trying hard to get rid of the man behind the story.
(On last disclaimer: I'm not even a big fan of serious fanfic, even if it is carefully made as "true to Tolkien/other writer" as humanly possible. I suppose it is because I prize original writing so much it seems a waste to me personally to conform myself to another person's ideas and ideals, therefore I don't enjoy reading it that much either. I don't mean this as a condemnation of serious fanfic: I just thought to make my perspective on it clear, so I may be roundly discredited as one who just doesn't understand.

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