![]() |
![]() |
Visit The *EVEN NEWER* Barrow-Downs Photo Page |
|
![]() |
#1 |
Cryptic Aura
Join Date: May 2002
Posts: 6,003
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Well, it looks as if I will be the only one with hesitations about this craftsman/mechanical division. I've seen brass items, wood work, jewellery, rugs that have been hand made in these modern times and I wouldn't say that all of them were so special. Some yes. But I've seen faults and weaknesses that the modern craftsman has just shrugged off or was too harried and hurried to fix, possibly because he had a quota to meet. Or joints where too much material was blobbed together. At the same time, I've seen hand made modern quilts that are every bit as meticulous and beautiful as historical quilts, but these quilts were not made to be marketed.
Much depends on how 'quality control' is applied. With mechanical construction, that is determined by economics (cost), quality of tooling and machining, and the expected cost that the item will fetch. That is, who the item is being constructed for. A Ford has a rather different construction than, say, a Jaquar or Lambergini. (And some even say that the day a car is constructed has a bearing on the quality of its workmanship.) I think those same economic factors applied as much in the past. Some smiths might work fast to put more items through to get more bread on the table. Some smiths might take a shine to a particular customer (possibly the wealthier ones but not necessarily only those of deep pockets) and do special work for him or her. Some smiths might work on an object out of pure interest or love--if they had the time and financial freedom to do so. But always, the economic situation would impinge upon the craftsmanship. I've also heard that some of the Queen's carriages are a tad uncomfortable to ride in as their suspension system or springs and shock absorbers are not as accomplished an art as those of modern, horseless carriages. But I think Morth has suggested this point earlier. So, its economics + labourers' attention + technical knowledge if we are using objective measures of worth. If we argue that worth lies in the eye of the beholder, though, just as meaning lies in the reader's mind, ( ![]()
__________________
I’ll sing his roots off. I’ll sing a wind up and blow leaf and branch away. |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#2 |
Alive without breath
Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: On A Cold Wind To Valhalla
Posts: 5,912
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
![]()
Eönwë raises an interesting point about mass production. I would like to look into this a little.
Mordor and Angband mass produce weaponry, armour and soldiers for the wars. How do the elves and men answer this? With enchanted weapons, one-of-a-kinds and heroes, the like of whom may never be seen again. Both are things of war, but I do think they are different views of war. Sauron and Melkor in their mass production and floods of soldiers represent the basic destructive nature of war. The Dragons breathe fire, laying waste to the lands, the Balrogs go around- um- Balroging. Orcs hack down trees, not always to feed the fires of Isenguard or anything. All the destructive and horrific side of war. The elves, with their enchanted weapons and special captains, represent a more heroic side of war. The valour and bravery, the fight against evil, you might say. A very idyllic view, as has been argues in other threads, but I think Tolkien is trying to look at things in two different ways and he is perfectly entitled to. Perhaps Tolkien saw the mechanised way of producing weaponry (especially) as focussing too much on destruction. The less work that goes into the creation of something, the easier it may be to use it to destroy. Perhaps. That's not to say swords like Anduril were not used for killing. They were. But there is something about those thousands of crude blades dropping off the production lines that makes it seem like killing is only a small matter. In some cases, enchantment requires something of the self to go into the object. As has been discussed. If Anduril has something of Aragon within it, along with Isildur and Elendil, it may make the killing process a much more personal thing. Whereas with the blade off the production line, it may seem more functional. I don't know... Maybe?
__________________
I think that if you want facts, then The Downer Newspaper is probably the place to go. I know! I read it once. THE PHANTOM AND ALIEN: The Legend of the Golden Bus Ticket... |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#3 | ||
Flame of the Ainulindalë
|
Quote:
Quote:
This I think Tolkien was very much aware of: the machine gun, the artillery... faceless killing by mass-produced machines of destruction detached from the suffering and somehow also from the guilt of doing so. A most moral issue!
__________________
Upon the hearth the fire is red Beneath the roof there is a bed; But not yet weary are our feet... |
||
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#4 | |
Flame Imperishable
Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Right here
Posts: 3,928
![]() ![]() ![]() |
Getting personal with a sword?
Quote:
I'm sure Aragorn, for example, wouldn't use the sword, Narsil reforged, for such a crude thing as hunting or the like, not only because it's impractical, but because he respects this weapon as something other than the weapon. This is even stronger in the case of Anduril, because Narsil was reforged just for Aragorn, so he has even more responsibility to uphold the sword's name and honour. And this also leads to the subject of people naming their weapons. Nowadays with guns it is less important, as the guns aren't actually yours, but belong to the army. But in the past the past you had your own weapon, one which had served you well in the past, and you would feel attached to it. The weapon might have even been passed down to you, and as the sword lives longer than its bearers, their name and memory and deeds are part of the sword. When it has its own identity, it makes you do things that are related to it, because as stated above, I don't think that Aragorn would use Anduril for any of the less "noble" tasks. The sword developes a life of its own, and we see in the Narn, Gurthang acts on its own, and I think this is also symbolic of all swords, in that the sword over time gets a personality.
__________________
Welcome to the Barrow Do-owns Forum / Such a lovely place
|
|
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#5 | |
Flame of the Ainulindalë
|
Quote:
How would you count for it? I mean Karl Marx spent the first sections of his Capital to analyse the different meanings and scopes of "value" coming up with more fuzz than a definitive answer... ![]() There is the "use-value" of a thing (how well a product does the thing it's made for - or more modernly: how well it answers the needs of the buyer) and the "market-value" of a thing (how much people are ready to pay for it because they think it worth it), but also the "surplus-value" (how much is it acceptable to charge "from between" by the owner of the production-system) and all that stuff... How would you determine the objective worth or value of a thing produced in a human society? A cheap thing can be good, inattentive labour may bring forwards decent results and much attention may end up in poor quality - and sometimes someone makes it well without knowledge and a cognisant person may make bad stuff if he has a bad day or something... And can we approach a thing like quality from purely objective measures in the first place? But I'm not sure it's up to a "subjective measure" either, but more like to a culturally relative measure which changes by times and cultures - and fashions - which people live themselves into and believe it's them who decide about the value of things...
__________________
Upon the hearth the fire is red Beneath the roof there is a bed; But not yet weary are our feet... |
|
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#6 | |||||||
Cryptic Aura
Join Date: May 2002
Posts: 6,003
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Quote:
![]() But if we are talking economists, and accountants, and CEOs then clearly they do daily come up with operational definitions of worth/value, as they are the ones who decide quantities of raw goods and materials to be used--ie, the planned obsolescence of the item being manufactured--salaries, bonuses, tax write-offs and, largely, market prices. (And when they're wrong, there goes the company, unless it is large enough to 'merit' a government bailout.) Quote:
Quote:
![]() Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
But I don't think Tolkien was discussing actual, historical warfare. I think much of his writing leans towards the kind that we can easily associate with symbolism, so that magic becomes a believable quality, where it wouldn't be in an historical account. My, I have run on. And now must do a Monty Python battle act--"run away! run away!"
__________________
I’ll sing his roots off. I’ll sing a wind up and blow leaf and branch away. Last edited by Bêthberry; 03-17-2009 at 08:48 AM. |
|||||||
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#7 |
Ghost Prince of Cardolan
|
Random Thoughts which may or may not have to actually deal with Tolkien
Bethberry, I believe, mentioned "planned obsolescence," which is for me a huge reason why the old that is strong does not wither in this day and age. Because economies are so consumption-based, one has to buy the same thing over and over again to keep all of these stuff-producers in work. It's actually in manufacturers' best interests to create technology that will conk out one day after the warranty expires, just so that you'll buy a new one. I am clinging desperately to my grandmother's old ice-cream scoop (which was mass-produced, but in those days when mass-produced ice-cream scoops were new and thuse could afford to be of a good quality), which has lasted nigh on fifty years. You're lucky if the store-bought ones last six months. Because things are so cheap and abundant, quality doesn't matter anymore, which I think is the Hordes of Darkness' side of things: Really Really Awesome Weapons are unnecessary if you've got enough brute force to overwhelm the good guys. We can't forget that even with such heroic figures as Aragorn & co. the West would have been screwed without Frodo and the Ring.
The other thing about modern firearms is their great "equalizing" effect. In order to be proficient at the sword or the bow, you had to spend hours upon hours of training, have great physical strength, etc. But a firearm creates all of that power for you, which is great news for a petite like me. All I have to do is know how to aim, hold steady, and not jerk the trigger; laser sighting makes the "aim" step even easier. Suddenly anyone can kill anyone, and there's no more need for these great heroic figures who can fight for a day on the Pelennor and come out mostly unscathed. The ease of cheaply-made, available-for-all stuff may make our life more convenient, but it's not as fascinating as all those great tales. No wonder all of Tolkien's heroes use old stuff.
__________________
Got corsets? |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#8 |
Alive without breath
Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: On A Cold Wind To Valhalla
Posts: 5,912
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
![]()
Perhaps this all comes down to power, or perhaps, perceived power.
Having a gun can, as Mnemosyne pointed out, give almost anyone power. A sword, while still dangerous in any hands, is always more dangerous in the hands of a trained swordsman. (To an extent, someone who has practice with a gun will be better at aiming, to be sure, but a gun in the hands of a novice can still create fear, and that's the main point of it). But where enchantment is concerned, I think it goes beyond swords. It was the thought of Beren that got me on this line of thinking. What stops him from being killed on his journey towards Doriath? What makes Thingol think twice about killing him? His sword? No. The ring of Felagund. We are never told if this ring has magical powers, exactly, but it certainly has some power. Perhaps it is of a different kind. The respect or memory they held for its previous wearer make it more than a ring. Although it cannot kill, it stops them in their tracks. Few blades could do that. If I may take an example from Doctor Who. ![]() In the Ninth Doctor's final episode he confronts The Daleks. The Doctor has no weapons or means of stopping them. But the Daleks are still terrified of him. Not because of what he has in terms of threat, as such, but because of their memory of him and what he has done to them in the past. The oncoming storm. Now, back to Middle Earth. A similar thing may be seen with Anduril. More than just an elvish blade, it is THE sword, the one that cut the Ring off Sauron's hand. Moreover, it was wielded by Aragorn's forefathers. It aided in Sauron's first fall, it should aid in his final fall. From a narrative stance, this is quite appropriate. Another good example could be the Malorn tree that Sam plants in Hobbiton. It is special not only in its uniqueness (the only Malorn west of the mountains, east of the sea), but in the memory it instils in Sam. Of Lorien and Galadriel. I'm sure Gimli would have had a fair few things to say about it. ![]()
__________________
I think that if you want facts, then The Downer Newspaper is probably the place to go. I know! I read it once. THE PHANTOM AND ALIEN: The Legend of the Golden Bus Ticket... |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#10 | ||
Wight
Join Date: Mar 2009
Location: USA
Posts: 240
![]() |
Hookbill
Quote:
The Ents names (their Entish names) Treebeard says he can't tell Merry and Pippin because his name is constantly growing. The Ents' names are essentially their life stories. Speaking of 'enchanted' swords I wonder exactly when do these magical weapons get named? Do they get named upon being crafted (was it the Japanese who named their swords?) or were they named after accomplishing a great deed? Was "Narsil" really some special/enchanted blade or was it because of the name, the story, attached to the blade? Names can create stories and those stories can form part of the legend, or the magic. What about why the Elven Rings were given names but not the other rings of power? 'The One Ring' is afterall a title, not a name. Lalwende Quote:
What's interesting is technology and mass production was seen as the way to get out of the "savage" curses of the past. The first dagguerotypes (I believe about 1820s?) were seen as magicians. Nathaniel Hawthorne's The House of the Seven Gables is I believe an excellent book which tries to argue that through technology, and interesting enough...nature, we can achieve progress and escape the dark, often dirty, past. This argument was the new idea in the world, not society had fallen from its glory days, and needed to be restored to its glory days - Society needed to make its own new glory days. We get a revolution of ideas through history, and I think WWI brought out a new side to technology and mass production that people never thought was possible. That side left a huge black mark on technology, and using technology for "advancement." In my opinion it's not technology, the sciences...etc, that is evil, it's how we decide to use it. Didn't Tolkien say something similar about magic in his books? It can be used for healing, preservation, protection, but also domination and destruction. Last edited by Kent2010; 03-23-2009 at 09:01 AM. |
||
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
#11 | |
Flame Imperishable
Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Right here
Posts: 3,928
![]() ![]() ![]() |
Quote:
That is why a machine could never create a weapon with a "soul" like Gurthang. And when I say craft, I separate it from craftsman because the crafting I mean is like a long time ago, when crafting was your life's work, and everything you made had your name on it, so if you ever produced a product that anyone hated, your reputation would be damaged. Now peole can just change their company name to avoid this, but then it was the craftsman who personally associated themselves with the product.
__________________
Welcome to the Barrow Do-owns Forum / Such a lovely place
|
|
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |