|  | 
|  | 
| Visit The *EVEN NEWER* Barrow-Downs Photo Page | 
|  04-30-2007, 03:30 PM | #1 | |
| Illustrious Ulair Join Date: Aug 2002 Location: In the home of lost causes, and forsaken beliefs, and unpopular names,and impossible loyalties 
					Posts: 4,240
				   | 
				
				I now pronounce you Dwarf & Hobbit...oops!
			 
			
			http://www.next-gen.biz/index.php?op...=5400&Itemid=2 Now, this is not about the 'morality' of inter-racial marriage, same sex marriage or anything else. Its about to what extent writers of fanfic & players of role-playing games ought to change an existing creation. No gay marriage in Middle-earth, no Dwarves marrying Hobbits - because those things don't happen in Tolkien's writings. For the time being, that is ... Quote: 
 Yet, what if the majority of players decide they do want to play a wizard hobbit, or a flying Elf - do the rules of Middle-earth get changed to suit them? And at what point does Middle-earth on-line stop having anything to do with Tolkien's creation & become just another on-line fantasy game? And yet, and yet... one comes down to the question of discrimination - if same sex marriages are banned in this manifestation of M-e is this acceptable? It seems to me that this incident has opened up a whole can of worms about Tolkien's creation - while the books (& movies based on them) set the boundaries of Middle-earth the question never even arose. Now one manifestation of M-e is suddenly opened up to thousands of co-creators, whose values & fantasies may conflict with Tolkien's own. So, another 'canonicity' discussion in part, but also a simpler question - if players get to change the rules of M-e in this game, is it really M-e? | |
|   |   | 
| 
 | 
 | 
|  |