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#1 |
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Ghost Prince of Cardolan
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Gandalf does seem alot different between the Hobbit and LOTR. It might be of a specific audience but, i don't feel Tolkien was trying to convey that message... More or less, the Hobbit seems to be the "test drive" of middle earth and what it holds. You seem to be explained to by what characters learn in the Hobbit but, in the LOTR, things seem to be expected. As with gandalf, i really only see character development, or, how the main character conveys his personal image of Gandalf. Bilbo seems to view Gandalf much differently than that of Frodo who, in the beginning of the lord of the rings, bases most of his knowledge of gandalf by Bilbo's tales and gandalf's actions around him and other hobbits. As the book progresses, we see Gandalf literally, take on a new light. Frodo notices this as well, and begins to see a 'new' gandalf that he hasn't experienced before. Thus, we see through a new image.
Another factor can be that in the Hobbit, 90% of the point of view comes from Bilbo, while in the LOTR, more character's share their thoughts and views in the story. Another person who changes, or we have a chance to see and hear more of is Elrond. Who, in the LOTR, plays more in the plot of the story than in the Hobbit. Explainning a map vs. Holding a council, frustration with in-laws and other activities... I see a change...~Ka
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#2 | |
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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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Quote:
The 'horror' I meant wasn't that of a 'big scary monster coming to eat you up' - which is basically what all the enemies in TH are, & what the original gollum was - its a deeper horror, of being trapped alone in the dark, by yourself, for age upon age. In short, none of the other 'monsters' Bilbo encounters seem to have feelings or emotional needs - we never wonder whether Smaug gets lonely on his bed of gold under the Mountain. We never think of any of the other 'monsters' having any kind of inner life, so we don't feel pity for them. With the 'revised' Gollum we do feel pity - Tolkien goes out of his way to make him a pitiable figure - & we feel such pity because of the horror of his existence. |
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#3 |
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Itinerant Songster
Join Date: Jan 2002
Location: The Edge of Faerie
Posts: 7,066
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Problem? Solution? What is all this? I just made a light hearted observation, and wham-o! eye yigh yigh! I don't have time to respond to anything in specificity or in depth. I just want to say for the record that I see - - - that is, saw initially - - - three different types of responses/takes on the two Gandalves (I like that spelling too); each was equally legitimate. 1) the revisionist response - trying to follow Tolkien through his own creative process. (Child's approach) 2) the fabled historian response - getting in Tolkien's back pocket and sub-creating how Frodo and Bilbo and the rest of them could have given us the various - - um - - variants! (Heren Istarion's approach, I believe?) 3) the fan response - loving Tolkien's characters as presented, not needing all this extra bosh (which isn't really bosh, just a certain kind of nerdy fun!). Me, I'm apt for the #2 & #3 approaches, both. As to problem in need of impossible solution, I don't see it that way at all, and didn't when I whimsically started this humble thread. I see the two (or more) Gandalfs as part and parcel of that which attracts me to the whole creative work. Just one additional note, having read through most of the posts - - it strikes me that The Hobbit has more of a Brothers Grimm feel than LotR, especially with talking purses, and trolls that turn to stone at daybreak; not to mention the feel of Mirkwood and all that. In other words, The Hobbit strikes me as strongly folkloric, though canted for children (which Tolkien later regretted, according to some letter or other). I still don't have The Letters! - it's on my Christmas list. Puleeze, Santa, pretty puleeze! Maybe you can send a special delivery by means of that Polar Bear......
Last edited by littlemanpoet; 12-21-2004 at 09:08 PM. |
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#4 |
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Psyche of Prince Immortal
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thankfully i've never seen the Cartoon, but i feel that TH shows, in a way, Gandalfs true path, point of view, and he develops many ways to get it, when he realizes that he himself must act, then he throws off what people think of him...err yea...
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Love doesn't blow up and get killed.
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#5 | ||
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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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Quote:
http://www.nytimes.com/1967/01/15/bo...interview.html Try these quotes from Tolkien himself, which may shatter some long held beliefs: Quote:
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#6 | |
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Ghost Prince of Cardolan
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Hmm... that quote has me thinking...
Brian Froud said something, that i think, reflects wonderfully on what tolkien's interview or his message. Quote:
Brian Froud is also an author and well known fantasy artist, if you are curious... ~Fae Ka~
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Vinur, vinur skilur tú meg? Veitst tú ongan loyniveg? Hevur tú reikað líka sum eg, í endaleysu tokuni? |
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#7 | ||
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Itinerant Songster
Join Date: Jan 2002
Location: The Edge of Faerie
Posts: 7,066
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Child: You raise some interesting points ... of course (I'd expect no less!). I don't think I've ever had the problem you speak of, regarding reading The Hobbit through the lens of LotR and The Silmarillion. It's not that I ever tried to keep the two separate in my mind, either. Maybe it's that I read The Hobbit first, and always cherished it for what it was.
Your first post on this thread, Child, cause two separate but linked thoughts for me. One is the different geographies of the two stories. It's as if the setting of The Hobbit is actually Middle Earth (thing "midgeard"), with its Shire, Rivendell, Misty Mountains, Great River of Wilderland, Mount Gundabad, Mirkwood with its Elven King's Halls, Lonely Mountain, Iron Hills, Long Lake, Esgaroth, Dale, Withered Heath, and all the rest. Notice how the names are all non-Elvish? It's only with LotR that we get the Elvish names for these places: Imladris, Hitheiglin, Anduin, Ered Mithrin, Rhovanion, Thranduil's Palace, Erebor, and so forth. And it's with LotR that we discover that Middle Earth (midgeard) has a past that reaches back into the Silmarillion, making it Arda where there is Valinor, Beleriand, Doriath, and Tol Eressea. Really, I'm only expanding on Child's theme that The Hobbit started out having nothing to do with the legendarium. The Maps show it. The second is the similar plot structure of the two works. They both start out lighthearted, with a trickster Gandalf, who by the time we're well into the story is revealed as a counsellor and arbitrator between powers. Think of the Battle of Five Armies to get a sense for the Gandalf that seems so familiar to us from LotR. So are there really two Gandalfs? Yes, but not between TH and LotR, I'm thinking. Rather, the Gandalf # 2 is revealed in The Sil and UT, where we learn of him as one of the Istari who is known as Olorin, a Maia. Whereas his resurrection (or whatever you prefer to call it) seems to make of him a virtually messianic figure, we still have no inkling of him as a Maia. But it's clear that once Gandalf was revealed as the White, Tolkien's creative imagination was already at work making the connections. I'm glad of it. Aiwendil: Quote:
Quote:
Last edited by littlemanpoet; 12-27-2004 at 09:23 PM. |
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