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#1 |
Auspicious Wraith
Join Date: May 2002
Location: The Netherlands
Posts: 4,859
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I'm not sure that Lewis' assertion that myths must be awe-inspiring is true. Awe is such a strong term and can surely mean different things to different people. The Lord of the Rings causes ridicule, not awe, among some people, yet I would argue that it is still myth.
Vice versa, there are stories which I hold in awe which are clearly not myth.
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#2 |
Stormdancer of Doom
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Thoroughly influenced by Loremaster LittleManPoet:
I think I see The Hobbit as more of a Faerie-Tale-- or at least it started out that way, and then took a serious turn shortly before the Battle of the Five Armies. See It Feels Different Near The Shire for further elaboration on that. I'll not deny it has many different mythical elements, and I suppose it could be called a myth; although-- personally-- my test for "Mythicity" (groan!!!) is simpler-- "What truth shines through from The Truth?" (Another can of worms.) In Lord of the Rings, the truths shining through from the Truth are stark and clear. But in The Hobbit? Hmmmm. Next time I read it, I'll keep this issue in mind, and see what I decide...
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...down to the water to see the elves dance and sing upon the midsummer's eve. |
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#3 |
Sword of Spirit
Join Date: Aug 2003
Location: Oh, I'm around.
Posts: 1,401
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I have always thought of The Hobbit as slightly different from LOTR. It almost seems....simpler. It is a vital part of the tale of the Ring, but is told in a way that it does not come across as overly deep. It is the perfect hook for LOTR. It is basic enough that a beginner to Tolkien would not suddenly be scared away, as they might if they tried to start with The Silmarillion. Yet it holds all the key elements of JRRT's style that keep us so fascinated every time we read it.
I agree that it is a 'kind of' myth. It is, as Son of Numenor pointed out, a small part of a greater myth. Such as a piece in a puzzle. Without that one piece, you can still see what the puzzle looks like, but the puzzle is still not complete without that one piece. All in all, it is not a myth in itself, but does belong to a myth, and the myth would not be as great without it.
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#4 | |||
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
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The Hobbit is a non mythic story set in a mythic world. Its as if anyone of us were suddenly to stray into the world of myth, & have a series of adventures - we would not be creating another myth, but rather interacting with them. So, its a fairy story, which is not a poor man's myth, but a thing in itself. In that sense it could be argued that LotR is not a myth, it is also a fairy story. The early part of the Legendarium, the Ainulindale, Valaquenta, the creation of Arda, the early battles with Melkor, are the myths, the tales of the first age are Legends, & the events of the Hobbit & LotR are fairy stories.
Having said that, I think all Imladris's points apply to fairy stories as much as to myths, & Helen's point is valid - the Hobbit opened up a whole new, 'real' world to me, & that feeling of 'reality' comes from somewhere, not originating in art, but communicated through art - the art is the medium of comunication, because if its true that Quote:
Whether its a myth a legend or a fairy story is in the end irrelevant, the important question, for me, is why & how, it affects us in the way it does - the effect is more important than the label. Let me throw something in here. In the catalogue for the 1992 Tolkien Centenary exhibition at the Bodleian Library in Oxford, there's a page of Tolkien's calligraphic doodles, written on the back of a torn sheet of minutes from an English Faculty Board Meeting of 27th Oct 1939. Mostly nonsense, but a couple of sentences read: Quote:
Now just reading that I could almost begin to imagine a fairy story, certainly more along the lines of the Hobbit than LotR (in fact another 'doodle' on the page reads 'In a hole in the ground there lived a hobbit, curious & egregious little person as any of his friends would have told you'). So, I was almost back in the fairy story world of the Hobbit, just by reading that one sentence. Its like that world exists & there are 'doorways' into it in even the most unlikely places - even on a page of 'doodles'. Quote:
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#5 |
Itinerant Songster
Join Date: Jan 2002
Location: The Edge of Faerie
Posts: 7,066
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Wow, Mark, thanks for the kindness! You represent my thought well, of course.
But the quality of the effect will be different. Reading the synopsis alone gives one the skeleton of the fairy tale: the plot, hero, villain, main artefact, the heroic task to be achieved, the denoument. Reading a snapshot, such as the doodles on the back of a page of minutes, give you a flavor, or something - - - but if you did not know the story, wouldn't the flavor be different? You know who Gandalf was, and what a Hobbit is. Tolkien knew Gandalf as a Norse dwarf when he wrote that line, though it obviously sparked some deep creative thing in him; and he had no idea what a Hobbit was - yet - at that time. Reading an entire chapter (perhaps one may call it a panoramic snapshot), which was how I was introduced to Tolkien, gives one a different taste. This is what happened to me. My older brother read Riddles in the Dark to me when I was age 8 -in the dark, as a bedtime reading. I was hooked! But my experience was quite different from Tolkien's, obviously I immediately began reading the book for myself. Desire with a capital "D" hit me for the first time during a mere description of traveling (doesn't that say volumes about me?) - from the Shire to the Ettenmoors. It was meant by Tolkien to be a recounting of moving from pleasant, recognized, homely environs to inhospitable wilds, but I remember seeing the blowing leaves in the trees, the lonely hills, the endless miles of wild land with just a single road passing through its vastness, with old ruined castles built by kings long ago that some said were evil. - - A world was opened up to me in that single passage, a world I wanted enter. So in my estimation, The Hobbit has mythic elements. So I agree in general with point #1, and entirely with point #2, that the pleasure of mythic fairy tale is not in suspense, etc. Point #3, that human sympathy is at a minimum..... well, in thoroughgoing myth, quite. In traditional fairy tale, I think this also holds. Consider the tales collected by the brothers Grimm as an example. But in mythic fantasy, something that is unique to the 19th through 21st centuries, human sympathy is absolutely essential. Mythic fantasy is a new entity, first developed by such folks as William Morris and Lewis Carroll (Tolkien liked "Sylvie and Bruno"). Davem is correct that the Silmarillion and the Lays of Beleriand, etc., were myth. Tolkien designed them that way. But LotR and the Hobbit (as well as Leaf by Niggle and Smith of Wootton Major) are mythic fantasy. It contains the stuff of myth, legend, and fairy tale, but renders it in a modern novel or short story. The Hobbit, by the way, most definitely contains the fantastic. There's a Ring that endows its wearer with invisibility, there are Elves who can disappear from view in the flash of a moment, there is a dragon, there is an oracle and prophecy, a special keyhole that can only be seen by moonlight. Very mythic and folkloric. |
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#6 | ||
Ghost Prince of Cardolan
Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: Pennsylvania, WtR, passed Sarn Gebir: Above the rapids (1239 miles) BtR, passed Black Rider Stopping Place (31 miles)
Posts: 1,548
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I imagine if an elf was asked he would say both no and yes.
It was originally written, of course, as a child's story originally unconnected to greater Middle-earth, Quote:
Quote:
So it rather depends on ones perspective whether to view it as originally conceived or as later incorporated (philosophically and some crucial elements) into Middle-earth mythology.
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