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So, Hobbits live in harmony, without much knowledge of the outside world. It's a paradise like state. When Frodo embarks on his quest, he gradually learns more of the world and thereby of himself. He becomes self-conscious, as we see at the end of the Fellowship when he gets the clear insight that he has to fulfill this task alone.
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Ivo
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I think that was the sole purpose of Tom Bombadil.
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Boromir88
Ah, words fraught with peril, Boromir88. There have been enough threads explicating enough other purposes for Tom Bombadil that any such claim is greeted with a knowing smile. For example:
The wrong kinds of details
Another one is "It feels different in the Shire", which I can't seem to find with a search. Maybe someone else can help find it?
That said, I think your main point of the Hobbits' growth from dependency to capability is quite apt. I find it interesting that Tolkien only puts juvenilian satire in the mouth of the arrogant Boromir, while he puts much horatian satire in everything having to do with Hobbits.
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I wonder if Tolkien was a satiric writer.
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In a word,
Yes. Check out
Farmer Giles of Ham. You will be convinced just what a rip-roaring satirist Tokien can be, poking fun at Oxford philologists, no less (in other words, at himself), the noble class, and much else.
Smith of Wootton Major has a certain degree of satire, as does
Leaf by Niggle. If you have not read these works, you have new treasures to discover among Tolkien's short(ish) stories.
Ivo: What!?!
Wanna explain your thinking? It's one of my favorite sections.