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#521 | |||
Cryptic Aura
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About this question of allegory, I would like to consider its context.
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In other words, this statement about allegory does not necessarily reflect Tolkien's conscious, deliberate thoughts while he was writing LotR. They represent his thought, after the fact, in response to critics. For us to understand the Foreward, we have to realise that this is the author responding to reader's thoughts post-WWII. [What would be intriguing would be to find letters or other documents which give us insight into Tolkien's discussions with, say, C. S. Lewis, about allegory--a discussion which could have been carried on during the writing of LotR or during those many Inklings sessions at the Bird and Baby.] On the other hand, this Forward could reflect Tolkien's reading back into his work so that it could not be taken as a simplistic encomium for the Allies. That is, the historical context of WWII and the post war years created a locus of interpretation for LotR--one which did not exist (or was in the process of being created) while Tolkien was writing LotR (but which did not explicitly exist while he was creating the Legendarium). Tolkien therefore had to distinguish between his book and the new historical milieu, in which people would read LotR. His purpose might have been more devoted towards disproving the simplistic equation of Victorious allies with Aragorn and Sauron with Hitler and the Nazis than towards an explicit statement about his allegorical intention. The Foreword in this context would be more about his concept of good and rightful action, in contrast to authoritarian mechanisation, than about his writing habits. It reflects his desire to write his book forward into history, I suppose it could be said. My point is not to discount Tolkien's statement about the freedom of the reader but more to posit a context in which to consider his authorial statements. Quote:
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#522 | |
A Mere Boggart
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The other thing is that Allegory is not necessarily forced on the reader in any case - it can be incredibly subtle, or the reader can simply miss it, and by the same token, it is also easy to 'read' something as an allegory even when it is not.
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#523 | ||
Corpus Cacophonous
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#524 | |
Cryptic Aura
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I repeat myself once again. Tolkien wrote his denial of allegory after the fact. Perceiving any kind of analogy with WWII is an act of retroactive reading, taking an historical context and reading it back into a text which was at least begun before the war, even if it was completed under the war's terrible cloud. There are books which become more 'meaningful'--that is, more significant to our understanding of our world-- when events occur after they are written and published which somehow seem to resonate with events in the book, as if the book were prophetic in some way. The historical events make readers more aware of certain aspects in the book, things which might have been missed before the historical events, highlighting those events in particular ways which point to an interpretation. This is entirely in keeping with how we read. We bring to every book we read our own personal experience and every other book we read. If we are attentive readers, we are careful to see how readerly desire informs our reading. To me, the fascinating point about Tolkien's statement is how he attributes to the Allies tendancies more often attributed to Mordor--a point which the Hitler-allegorists were missing. Was Tolkien fighting against the developing mythology of WWII which created very much an evil/good split, particularly as the West came to know more and more about the Holocaust? Was he fighting against the victors' tendancy always to portray history from their point of view? If so, he was suggesting that the act of reading and interpreting is a very subtle, complex act, rather than telling us an either/or way to read LotR.
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#525 | ||
Illustrious Ulair
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From this point of view, Lembas both is the host & is absolutely not the host - it depends on how, or whether, the reader chooses to apply it. Both statements are true, but therefore Lembas is not an allegory of the Host To some readers it is the Host & nothing but the Host, to others it isn't anything of the sort. Applicability may be as absolute in the mind of the reader as allegory is in the mind of the writer. One is left with the option of calling it a 'spiritual' allegory of the 'human condition', the events with which it deals being universal 'archetypes'. I suspect this is perhaps how Tolkien saw it. In Letter 71 Tolkien states: Quote:
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#526 | ||
A Mere Boggart
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#527 | ||||
Ghost Prince of Cardolan
Join Date: Dec 2002
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archetypes
sigh.. the c thread
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Brin on Tolkien |
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#528 | |
Corpus Cacophonous
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It's up to the reader. ![]()
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#529 | |
Illustrious Ulair
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#530 | ||
A Mere Boggart
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We could still see the work as allegory, but to do so we must choose to reject Tolkien's terms. Therefore in this case the Author is of great importance to our understanding, whether we accept or reject what he has stated.
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#531 | |
Deadnight Chanter
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an aside
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#532 | ||
Corpus Cacophonous
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In any event, the effect is the same whether we allow the reader to perceive an unintended allegorical meaning, or whether we categorise it as applicability. The reader remains free to interpret and to form his or her own understanding of the work. Quote:
I have not read the Brin article or the thread discussing it in detail, but a brief review highlights for me the importance of not dismissing a reader's interpretation out of hand simply because we do not agree with part (or even all) of what he or she is saying. It looks to me like Brin puts forward some interesting ways of looking at LotR which, while we might not agree with his conclusions, might nevertheless enhance our own understanding of the work.
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#533 | ||
Illustrious Ulair
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He's also defined 'Y' (Applicability) as the freedom of the reader to make connections between the events of the story & events in the real world - if they so choose. Now, because he hasn't committed the 'sin' of doing 'X' those 'similarities' to the real world contained in the story will be sufficiently vague & generalised that the reader may find many opportunities of such 'applicability' without being able to find any absolute one-to-one correspondence for the whole story (ie if LotR is an allegory of WW2, & Sauron is an 'allegory' of Hitler, who is Frodo an allegory of?) Quote:
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#534 | |||
Cryptic Aura
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I would like to suggest, in response to Lalwendë, that any author's definition about how to interpret his or her work, particularly one written after the work has been completed and published, should be referred back to the text for validation. Does Tolkien's definition of allegory apply to his work or is he attempting to bring out a quality which he wishes now, after publication, other readers to see? In this case, Tolkien is writing in response to other readers' interpretations, and so it is not simply a question of the author's intention being of great importance to our understanding. This situation is an interpretational matrix where the author as reader is responding to other readers about the text. Tolkien here is an interpreter of his own work and we, as readers, have the right to examine or cross-examine any reader's interpretation to consider its appropriateness. This is particularly relevant in Tolkien's case becase he was such a tinker and wrote so many versions of, in particular, Galadriel. Readers might well indeed decide that in this case his work does support or demonstrate this distinction between allegory and applicability, but readers are not bound to automatically accepting his definition.
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#535 | |
A Mere Boggart
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#536 |
Dread Horseman
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As a writer -- and indeed just as a person going around in the world -- this attitude of complete interpretive "freedom" sort of bums me out. I picture a reader -- or just some dude that I'm trying to communicate with -- with arms crossed and an arrogant smirk on his face, saying, "You say what you have to say, then I'll decide what I want it to mean." I'd prefer a sincere attempt at understanding.
How annoyed do any of us here get when someone misunderstands -- or deliberately distorts -- the meaning and intention of one of our posts? And now I hear that the author's interpretation of his own post is only as valid as any other reader's? "No, what I meant was--" "Help! Help! I'm being repressed!" In any confrontation between a reader's interpretation and an author's intention, the author has the authority, the right, sometimes even the obligation to clarify his meaning. It reminds me of that scene in Annie Hall where the guy is pontificating about Marshall McLuhan, and Alvy goes, "Well, that's funny, I happen to have Marshall McLuhan right here." Well, I happen to have Professor Tolkien right here to tell you that he didn't write an allegory of WWII. Can't we just take him at his word? |
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#537 | ||
Corpus Cacophonous
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In any event, I think that we have little to fear from non-sensical interpretations. Even if they are genuine, they will be unacceptable to most other readers and will therefore never form part of our general understanding of the work. Quote:
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#538 | |
Cryptic Aura
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Taking a writer "at his word" has many consequences. Sometimes writers deliberately try to obfuscate, because for a variety of very legitimate reasons they don't wish to provide an 'authoritative roadmap' to their work. Sometimes they legitimately forget or remember incorrectly (human memory being what it is). Sometimes they move further on with an idea and end up discussing the development, reading it back into the original intention. As Aiwendil discussed on one of our threads--was it Canonicity or one of the Galadriel ones?--Tolkien actually has three characterisations of Galadriel, and deciding which one to make applicable to LotR actually creates three different interpretations of the Lady of Lothlorien. We know that Tolkien changed his conception of what he was doing as he aged--even Christopher Tolkien admits this and in some measure regrets it--so why must we automatically assume any statement to be definitive? It is thus not 'disrespectful' to the author to apply his own statements to his work. It in fact often can result in greater understanding or appreciation of his work and his methods. So, along with SpM I agree that the important quality is the sincerity of the desire to understand. And a faith that the significant interpretations are those which will prove lasting. (Yet even here I have to remind myself that some histories have been lost because of the violence done to them.) This said, however, it does not limit readers from being flippant or satirical or flatfooted or, in fact, even malicious. This kind of (mis)interpretation happens all the time no matter what critics or arbitrators or literary lawgivers might try to legislate or prescribe. Language is not a stable entity. What we can do to hold literary terrorists at bay is to describe the conditions for our interpretations rather than prescribe which meaning, without thought and consideration, is the solely acceptable one. That way, we make ourselves--and our beloved texts--less objects for attack or distortion.
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I’ll sing his roots off. I’ll sing a wind up and blow leaf and branch away. Last edited by Bęthberry; 08-03-2005 at 12:08 PM. Reason: clarification of meaning, adding title |
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#539 | ||
A Mere Boggart
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#540 | |
Illustrious Ulair
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If a reader (or a 'critic') interprets (honestly oor otherwise) LotR as an allegory of WW2, that's up to them. the question is whether Tolkien wrote it as such. I think there's enough evidence to show he didn't. It may have been, in part, his response to WW2, & to other things that he had experienced - WW1, loss of his parents at a young age, etc. He himself stated that Sam was in part a tribute to the Batmen of WW1.
So, the Scouring of the Shire may have been his response to the destrucion oof the English countryside that he loved, but the result is not an 'allegory' of that destruction - it would be more accurate (though still not correct) to say it was his 'dream' of how the reality could be overturned & things brought back to the way he wanted them to be. The Ring is not an allegory of the Bomb (an interpretation he was constantly confronted with - it would be closer to the truth to say that the Bomb was an 'allegory' of the Ring - if the situation can work that way - because the Ring is an 'Archetypal' Image of an absolutely destructive, corrupting force. Thus it can be 'applied' (as with the Rammas) to an number of Primary world objects (& philosophies), from toxic waste to Islamicism or the kind of militant Christian fundamentalism that results in doctors & nurses working in abortion clinics being assaualted & even murdered. The fact that so many different readers can 'find' so many different 'allegorical' interpretations of the work proves that it either was never written as an allegory of WW2 or anything else, or that if it was it was a very poorly done thing, because in spite of the author's supposed intention to tell the story of WW2 in allegorical form, most readers don't get it, & think he was writing an allegory of something else entirely. As to Bb's point about the development of Galadriel's character over time, to me this shows that Tolkien didn't see the character as an 'allegory' of anyone/thing in WW2 - by changing her character he would have changed the meaning of the story she played a part in. The most you could say then is that possibly, at some point, Tolkien intended an allegorical meaning, but that almost immediately he changed his mind. This is a point that is too easily forgotten - the Legendarium was [i]never/i] 'fixed'. It was a developing conception, which only became set in stone at his death - because he was no longer around to continue it. It was like Niggle's Tree - constantly being changed on the canvas because the thing he was painting was a 'living' thing. His attempts in the Letters to 'explain' the characters & events of LotR were not so much attempts at pushing his readers into accepting a particular understanding of the story, but rather his own attempts to understand something not entirely (if at all) of his own making. What one gets from reading HoMe & the Letters is the sense that he himself didn't fully understand 'his' mythology - it was as much a mystery to him as to any of its readers. To read vols 6-9 of HoMe is enough to convince anyone that it is not an allegory of anything - either specifically or generally. If it was simply (even at the time of writing) simply an allegory of WW2 he would not have struggled so much to produce it - he could simply have read the daily reports in the Times & 'rewritten' them in mythic form. He struggled till he 'discovered' 'what really happened'. And let's face it, he, & his publishers, would have had a much easier time selling an 'allegory' of WW2 to the public than an 'heroic romance'. For all his protestations about it not being an allegory in the Foreword the Second Edition, his words in the First Edition foreword are even clearer that it is not anything but a 'fairystory'. Quote:
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#541 | ||
Corpus Cacophonous
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Davem, I think that most of us would agree that Tolkien did not intend LotR to be an allegory of WW2. Does that assist us (either individually or as an 'intepretive community') in our understanding of LotR? Well, yes. But only to the extent that we take account of authorial intention. And whether or not we do so is down to us (individually or collectively) as readers.
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And just to go back to something that Mister U said: Quote:
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#542 | |
A Mere Boggart
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And having an influence can also depend upon who has that influence. If it is someone with status, then they are able to exert greater pressure than those who have little status. As I've said in the other C thread, you may well retain the right to do or say something but if nobody wants to listen or you do not have the means to express yourself then it is of little consequence.
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#543 | |
Illustrious Ulair
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You seem to be suggesting that this 'authorial intention' is something that can be divorced from the work itself - which is another way of denying the author's presence in the work. The work only exists because of the 'Author's intention' that it should. It is not an objective collection of statements but a work of Art. And so it must be taken. The 'Tower' of the Beowulf essay analogy/allegory was not a pile of stones which people who came upon it could take for what they wanted. It was a Tower, built with the express intention on the builder's part that he could look out on the Sea. Of course, others could come along, climb it & look at other things, or even (as in the analogy/allegory) demolish it to find out where the stones of which it was built originated. If they climb it & look at other things they are not using it for the purpose for which it was built. And however vociferous (& honest) they may be in their claims that it was built to 'look at the stars' or so the builder could have a quiet spot to read in, or that it was a castle (& thence to proceed to invent a 'history' for the local area in which there were assaults by a powerful enemy), etc, they would be wrong. No if, buts, or two ways about it. All the 'explanations' they come up with would be cases of 'applicability', not allegory, & they certainly wouldn't be 'equally valid' alongside the reason explicitly stated by the man who built the thing. If he says 'I built that Tower in order to look out on the Sea' (& if, climbing that tower one could see the Sea from its top) then I think we have to accept that it was built for the reason the man gives, & not try & impute other, more 'nefarious' reasons to him, accuse him of trying to cover up his real motives, or of changing his mind about its purpose after he had built it. 'Its a Tower I built in order that I could look out on the Sea, not a defensive structure.' is a clear enough statement, provable by experiment, & I think we should take his word for it unless we can prove him wrong. If the Tower can be made to serve another purpose by someone else, fine, but they would not be using the Tower for the purpose for which it was built - & they should admit that, & not claim that they know the 'real' intention behind it. The reader's interpretation is merely what they do with the book. All you seem to be doing is restating Tolkien's own position. It isn't an allegory of WW2 (or anything else) but the reader is free to find whatever meaning or relevance they can, or wish to, in it. The thing about your approach though is that it makes the later use of the 'Tower' by someone using it (or seeing it) as a castle equal to to that of the builder - it says that the builder (or writer) is no more important than the user (or reader). This, to my mind is wrong, if for no other reason than it doesn't show sufficient respect to the builder/writer. We are not equal creators of Middle earth with Tolkien. He gives, we recieve. Gratitude & respect, if nothing else, should require us to take account of 'authorial intention', & to give that greater weight than we give to our own interpretation - even put aside our own interpretation infavour of his stated intention.
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#544 | |||
Cryptic Aura
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Where individual readers discuss their own interpretations, interpretive communities will be developed out of the ferment, even the anarchy, of the discussions, as readers come to understand each other's perspective. Where we don't castigate interpretations as wrong or invalid or incorrect but instead consider their reasons, where we don't ridicule interpretations because they aren't based on wide reading experience, or grand knowledge or privileged information, we tend to develop better, more imaginative, more open-minded readers. In pedagogical terms, it is difference between the teacher as a facilitator of learning and the teacher as proponent of content. From comments in your posts, I would assume you knew mainly the latter kind of teacher and school, but I have seen the former kind. Quote:
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EDIT: Perhaps another way of explaining is to offer this experience of mine. While in London last summer, I came upon a small statue dedicated to someone. This statue was not listed in any of the tour books or guidebooks or histories that I had read prior to coming to London. Yet I knew who this person was because she had had a monument named after her in my home country--a mountain in fact, with a glacier. In one flash, time and space conflated and I was no longer a foreigner in London, but had found a small piece that I could interpret as my own. This interpretation is intensely personal, based upon a work of Art and Nature (how more Blakian than that) and completely independent of any knowledge of why and how the statue got placed in Charing Cross in the first place. That purpose is in fact irrelevant to my artistic experience, which likely has no great importance to others and certainly not to those who heroically endeavoured to commemorate the woman's fate, but remains very important to me. As I read the plaque, of course I came to know more about why the statue was built, but that knowledge really was, if I may borrow a term from davem, baggage which added to my experience after the fact but did not contribute to the initial aesthetic experience. It is possible to have a meaningful personal experience of a work of Art without knowing what or how the author wanted me to experience. This does not mean the author's intention is irrelevant, but that it is not crucial to the aesthetic experience. At least, intention as explained not in the story itself but in a prose explication written after the fact.
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I’ll sing his roots off. I’ll sing a wind up and blow leaf and branch away. Last edited by Bęthberry; 08-03-2005 at 04:41 PM. |
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#545 | |
Spectre of Capitalism
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Let me begin here by saying that I mean no offense to any particular contributor here. I haven't had a good rant in some time, and I find here an opportunity.
I have been posting in the Canonicity Slapdown thread (nearly identical to this one in terms of fluff and frippery), but I have to say that the amount of noise being generated on this topic is certainly annoying and nearly fatal. In the other thread I have attempted to post my opinions with some lucidity, but now I'm throwing down the gauntlet. With no attempts to read between the lines or find nuances of influencein some obscure turn of phrase in Letters, I want a sound, authoritative reponse to the following. I will verbally flog anyone who responds to this post with an "I think..." or an "I feel..." Give me facts. On the topic of Authorial Intent, I posted the following on the other thread: Quote:
On the subject of reader interpretation, suffice it to say that there are as many identical points of view on "what Tolkien means to me" as there are idenitcal snowflakes. It appears to me that verbage (rhymes with garbage) is being multiplied ad nauseum (with yours truly only adding to the weight of bandwidth) with ideas and whole conversations being repeated until the whole looks like a time-exposure photograph of a dog chasing its tail. Again, I truly mean no offense, but dadgummit, every reader is going to bring something different to this party, and judging one or another opinion as "mainstream" or "crazy" is not going to change the minds of those so inclined. It seems futile to say the least. It has been said that insanity is "doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results." Not only is the same thing being said over and over with no discernable result, but a new thread has been started which is paralleling the same stuff yet again. In my opinion, which I'm sure will be debated hereafter ![]() But then again, I got a really good rant out of it, so maybe it *does* serve a purpose. ![]()
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#546 |
Dread Horseman
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I interpret your post as a big thumbs up on how the thread is progressing and a note of encouragement to continue steady on. And you can take your authorial intention and stick it. Thanks for your support!
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#547 | ||||
Illustrious Ulair
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Oh, there is the 'annoying' newbies (to this thread, at least) thing which adds a little spice.....
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“Everything was an object. If you killed a dwarf you could use it as a weapon – it was no different to other large heavy objects." Last edited by davem; 08-03-2005 at 04:54 PM. |
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#548 | |||||
Corpus Cacophonous
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In your Tower example, a visitor may well accept that it was built for the specific purpose intended by the builder but, if they find that an alternative purpose suits them better, why should they not be entitled to use it for that alternative purpose? Quote:
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#549 |
Dead Serious
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"Tolkien's Meaning?" Or: "What Tolkien Means?"
It seems to me, that the two sides of the debate can be summed up by one of the two above phrases. Those of the "Tolkien's Meaning" camp are those who are in the Authorial Intent camp (which includes myself, by the way). These readers are looking for Tolkien's Meaning- what did the Author intend to be read here. Those in the "What Tolkien Means" camp are those who assert the Independence of the Reader (fools, in my opinion). They are not looking for what Tolkien means to say, but are stating what Tolkien means to them. Now, I am well aware that the Lord of the Rings was not, in Tolkien's opinion, an allegory. Nor was it intended, apparently, to be anything for its readers other than a blessed good read. However, if one looks at the "Meaning" side of things only, it is clear that REASON the Lord of the Rings was written was not so much to give the readers insights into their OWN minds (as the Reader-Camp asserts), but rather a means to pass along the meaning that TOLKIEN intended. It's like a telagram. The meaning of that message is determined by the sender. That is what he or she is trying to pass along to the receiver. The receiver can, according to his free will (and let's not get that debate mixed in here...) mix up the meaning of that message howsoever he or she wants. And if the message is vague enough, or unclear in parts, then this is a natural happening and should not be harshly judged if the received meaning. But if the meaning is clearing stated by the text, then that is clearly the CORRECT meaning, howsoever you distort it in your own mind for your own purposes. Likewise, the Lord of the Rings has its intended "messages". This is the canon establised by Tolkien: all the story, innuendo, background, languages, and morals that we are MEANT to receive from his epic. At times the exact definition of this message is confused, hence we have Balrog-wing debates and such to determine what was really intended. But in places where the author is quite clear about what his message, such as the fact that the Lord of the Rings is not an allegory, then going against this is a defial of the proper meaning. And on the subject of Balrog-wing debates... Surely none of the Reader's Rights camp should have participated in them- at least not with great heat. After all, if Tolkien's intention as to whether or not the Balrog in the "Fellowship" has wings, then why should they participate, seeing as they believe that Readers' Insights trump Authorial Intent? ~A Very Biased Devil's Advocate - Formendacil~
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I prefer history, true or feigned.
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#550 | ||
Corpus Cacophonous
Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: A green and pleasant land
Posts: 8,390
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... if you want them to. ![]()
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#551 | |
Stormdancer of Doom
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I have been waiting for someone else to accept Thenamir's challenge, though Mister Underhill's reaction did give me a bit of a chuckle. And since I am firmly in the "Author's Intention Plus Readers Experience Plus Glimpse Of Divine Truth With A Capital T" Camp, I thought somebody in the "Author's Intent" camp should do this. But nobody has taken a crack at it yet.
I cannot seriously be the only one in this debate with a copy of Letters???? Since the silence (on this topic) is resounding (so far), I will answer Thenamir's first question with another question: Which reference, sir, would you like to see first? I cannot choose. Here are the possibilities, in the ever-so-handy index, under Lord Of The Rings, Contents, author's intentions. (No, I did not type all this in. Praise Iluvatar for scanners, eh?) Quote:
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...down to the water to see the elves dance and sing upon the midsummer's eve. Last edited by mark12_30; 08-03-2005 at 07:52 PM. Reason: spelling |
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#552 |
Spectre of Capitalism
Join Date: May 2001
Location: Battling evil bureaucrats at Zeta Aquilae
Posts: 987
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Unbelievable! Actual new Tolkien references which are not all repeats of the same "allegory versus applicability" citation! All hail mark12_30, Praise Her With Great Praise!
We now have some definitive text to work with. And since her list seems to be quite exhaustive, I will have great fun now reading them all and deciding which ones with which to skewer people with. Great thanks to you, mark12_30. We could all take a lesson from your post.
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The object of life is not to be on the side of the majority, but to escape finding oneself in the ranks of the insane. ~~ Marcus Aurelius |
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#553 | |||
Cryptic Aura
Join Date: May 2002
Posts: 6,003
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That you feel you must rant demonstrates in part my point. When interpretive communities get closely contained and almost inbred, they tend to generate a limited number of answers/ responses/ opinions. This produces anger, mayhem, anarchy in those who want a means to state their interpretations but who feel either that the limited answers don't address points which interest them or that they are excluded from the debate, for whatever reason, be it time, knowledge, expertise, or other forms of cachet. I completely understand your anger, man, seeing as you are coming late to the debate. This is why Fordim's new thread, the Canonicity Slapdown thread, is quite appropo and significant. Look at how many Downers have responded to the poll, at least voting if not posting their opinion. The poll invites people to participate whereas this thread, maybe because it tends towards long windedness and, now, a certain amount of incestuous reproduction of ideas, tends to drive people away. I don't see that as requiring thread closure--I mean, after all, what is the point of debate when it is foreclosed, and, any way, how many successful threads other than RPG threads are closed? And please to remind all who claim that this thread is merely a rhapsody in reproduction, let me point out that last summer's posts did not consider the issue of allegory. This is actually a new application. Quote:
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Which is why I see Tolkien's analysis of the allegorical reading so interesting. He is responding to a 'meaning' made apparent by the historical condition post-publication. ![]() ![]() ![]()
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I’ll sing his roots off. I’ll sing a wind up and blow leaf and branch away. Last edited by Bęthberry; 08-03-2005 at 09:29 PM. Reason: added smilies |
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#554 | ||
Dead Serious
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I suppose, being a discussion of "applicability", applying the problem to another situation can only confuse it, but the decisiveness with which people crack down on the metaphor and declare "Ah, but it is not the same!" is not only irksome, but is related to the issue at hand. After all, if the reason that metaphor is "not the same"- and therefore non-applicable to the discussion- then surely all the linguistic evidence that is being debated should be taken in a similar manner, a manner which is purely literal. A metaphor or simile, after all, does its work by giving its message with the understanding that the person hearing/reading it understands the intended message. Does not a book work the same way? Yet if Tolkien says that his book is not an Allegory, that it was not written as a Metaphor or a Simile, but that it is intended to be taken at face, or literal, value. I'm not quite sure where I'm going with this yet, and it may well just stop here, but I found it most amusing that Bęthberry, who is weighing in on the Readers' (and thus the "Metaphorists") side is attacking the use of the my Simile. After all, if one cannot use another situation to explain or describe another, then surely there is no point in debating canonicity, since the text can only describe one situation- the one it literally describes. Maybe that was my point... I don't know. I'm so confused... Quote:
As a relative newbie who has not read the parts of the discussion that occured prior to my arrival, I have been hesitant to enter into what, for all intents and purposes, appeared to be an "Verbose Old Guard" private debate... Fortunately (or unfortunately?), I got over that...
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I prefer history, true or feigned.
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#555 | ||||||||||||||
Deadnight Chanter
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You overwhelm me. Probably time difference – I leave few innocent looking posts the evening; next thing I see in the morning is another pageful of posts. I’m responding one to one, downward, now, starting with 534. I write as I read, so probably I’m bound to repeat something already posted in some of the posts past 534, my apologies in advance, but I’m doing it for my own sake as well, to have the whole Canonicity issue revived and to refresh my own memory of what exactly do I think about it. I intend to apply my usual methodology – giving an analogy (ies) and building around it. Here we go:
Post 534: Quote:
Analogy 1: Suppose I’ve installed a CD-ROM to my PC. ‘Tolkien’s definition’ in this analogy would be an icon on my Control Panel defining the device as CD-ROM, not DVD-ROM or any other device. But as a user (=reader), I’m perfectly free to stick DVDs or any other things which take my fancy into the thing. Now tapes would not fit, and blatant inconsistency of them would be obvious to me, but DVDs are different story, ain’t they? They look alike with CDs, and I may find error messages my PC is bound to throw up the whole point of the thing, and fancy everything is right and proper, but if I’m to see what’s ‘supposed’ to be seen, I should insert CDs, not DVDs. Emotions and experiences associated with seeing error messages would be as vivid, rightful, valid, whatever, as those of a user put CDs in CD-ROM and see things as they are supposed to be seen, but those are emotions, they have no evaluative meaning whatsoever. I’m free to prefer ‘There is no CD in the device’ message to the [whatever the CD should have contained], and it is my right to read messages instead of [whatever the CD should have contained], but I’m getting less for my money. Analogy 2: CD-ROM’s CD holder part can slide out and form a perfect coffee-cup holder. I may find it quite useful to insert a cup there every time I’m posting here, it would place the hot and invigorating coffee within my reach and I’d avoid risks of spilling it over my keyboard, but would not it be better for me to read the manual and employ my CD-ROM to its full potential? I voted ‘the book is cool’ option in the Canonicity Slapdown, meaning it to enhance that and ‘all of the above’ option together, but surely, Intention of the Author should be taken into account, as the manual should with CD-ROM devices, Experience of the Reader is there to prevent me of trying to force square VHS tapes into round CD slots, and Analysis of the Text comes into play when I’ve already found round disc to fit round slot, they are of compatible types, and now I may think about what I see on my screen. (Aside for LmP = feeling of enchantment may arise in case of IoA + EoR, but not necessarily adding up AoT to the soup. On the other hand, some may be enchanted by ‘there is no DVD in the drive’ message, seeing how it pops up miraculously every time.) Quote:
Post 535: Quote:
Post 536 Quote:
Post 537 Quote:
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And from another angle – remember ‘moral consensus’ of few pages back? What if these extravagant gentlemen have found some exiting ways of using CD-ROM the manufacturer originally installed but haven’t explicitly explained in the manual? Truth (guess whether it is with capital T or not, as I’ve deliberately put it as the opening word of the sentence) is not in numbers. Post 538 Agreement in general. Side note – existence of several statements of the Author, even if they contradict slightly between themselves, does not entitle us to introduce even more interpretations. We can settle by choosing one of the Author’s, or work them all into one, or (in Tolkien’s case) explain them by historiography and multitude of sources argument. But imagine CD-ROM (I stick by analogy) manual to state on page 5 that recommended record speed is 32 kb/ps, and on page 7 that is 16 kb/ps. Probing, we would probably find that it can do both, or that indeed one is preferable, but abstain from recording at all ‘cause it contradicts itself’ (being flippant or satirical or flatfooted or, in fact, even malicious) would be less wise. Post 539 No comments Post 540 Bits of the manual being recited ![]() Post 541 Quote:
Post 542 Lal seems to have ‘no comments’ from me for the most part today. But I have to fight fire with fire – what the ‘control’ in question is for? Post 543 Quote:
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(I do not mean to say you are not free to choose your priorities, Eru forbid). There is an analogy of a stutterer in a plane who alone is aware of one of the engines on fire. His only way to communicate information is to sing it to the stewards (as he is not stuttering when he is singing), and he sings it: The engine is on fire, sha-la-la-la. Seemingly, he is in possession of a good singing voice, so the steward and other passengers join in the chorus with their own ‘sha-la-la-las’. All round everybody is aesthetically pleased and humoured, but the final results is, fire is not extinguished and plain crushes. Should they seek the meaning besides the aesthetics; something could have been done about the situation. Post 545 Quote:
As I’ve already chosen the methodology, I have to write through to the end of [currently existing] posts to see if anyone have come with requested quotes already. Promise to make a search if no one did. Post 546 I run out of smileys seeing as there is a limit of three per post, but imagine ‘big grin’ here Post 547 Another ‘big grin’. ‘Show must go on’ malady above rendered to ‘circus addicts buying tickets off profiteer’ Post 548 Quote:
![]() Besides, if the freedom in ‘using the Tower’ is important for the user, for whom is the ‘correct usage’ important? For surely control must be there (if at all?) to ensure ‘proper usage of the Tower (CD-ROM)’? Post 549 Welcome ‘big grin’ Post 550 No comment Post 551 Gratitude and relief of not having to find all that myself. ‘smile’ Post 552 Agreement Post 553 Quote:
New application, yes, but not quite: Back there, page 4-5, also 7-8, there was an attempt to bring in the concepts of Truth, Something Else, Shop on the Border of Fairyland (all with capitals), if you remember, all with claims that there were Messages Tolkien tried to bring across, and there were attempts of defining these also. Quote:
Literature may lean heavily on aesthetics, but without ‘telegram’ inside it, it would be Art for Art’s sake. Bodybuilding is an exercise in obtaining a ‘beautiful body’ in the end, but sound exercise has Health as its final goal, beauty being enjoyable, pleasant, even desirable, but still by-product. Besides, turning ‘aesthetics’ back on you (wink), would you bet there won’t be people who would appreciate LoTR in Morse Code purely on it’s aesthetics and what Morse Code means personally to them? Post 554 Quote:
Post 555 Here we see... wait, that’s this very post of mine. Nice number, three fives ‘big grin’
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Egroeg Ihkhsal - Would you believe in the love at first sight? - Yes I'm certain that it happens all the time! Last edited by HerenIstarion; 08-05-2005 at 12:28 AM. Reason: typos |
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#556 | |
Corpus Cacophonous
Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: A green and pleasant land
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![]() At the risk of incurring the wrath of Formendacil ( ![]() The instruction manual, in so far as it pertains to loading and running the program, details how it is to be used, not what it is to be used for. If we are equating a computer program with a literary work, then I would say that it is the latter rather than the former which equates to the meaning of the work. Yes, if one tries to run an application using the wrong equipment or application, then one will not get much out of it. But, if one tries to read LotR upside down or at a distance of 50 feet, then one will not get much out of it either. But the program may be used for a variety of different functions. A database, for example, may be used to store addresses or list one’s favourite LotR quotes or for a variety of other functions. The programmer may well have had intended it to be used for a certain function or functions, but it is up to the user how he actually uses it. Similarly, the author may intend his work to have a certain meaning, but it is up to the reader how he interprets it. Of course, the software may have been designed to work particularly well when used for particular functions, and it is likely therefore that a sensible user will use it for those functions. Just as the skilled author will be successful in conveying his intended meaning to a sensible reader. The freedom nevertheless resides with the user/reader. Am I repeating myself? ![]()
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#557 | ||
A Mere Boggart
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: under the bed
Posts: 4,737
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![]() The perfect state is one in which readers can interpret as they wish and have the right to fully express their conclusions, but this does not happen, not even on the ‘Downs are we free. Total freedom is perilous, it means that nobody has power, nobody can set any limits. There is the potential for a lot of silly, ugly or confrontational (of course, in the opinion of the reader...) ideas and language, but the moment we say “you cannot use offensive language” or any other such statement we have begun to impose limits and restrictions on what the reader can do. If we are now saying that we are in an ‘interpretive community’ then this is a very different thing to true reader freedom; a community has rules, therefore as readers we are in no way ‘free’. In an interpretive community meaning might reside within the reader but that meaning is only validated by approval from our peers. We are faced with the decision of whether to stand by our opinion and be rejected by the group or to alter our opinion and remain within the community. The interpretive community can never be more than freedom-lite. I happen to like the idea of an interpretive community as I feel more comfortable within certain boundaries. But who determines the boundaries of the interpretive community? Someone must be there to define the point at which we cross a line. To take the ‘Downs as a case in point, is it the Barrow-Wight? Or is it a democratic process? Or do we have rule by consensus? In that case, is it the highest repped members who set the boundaries? Or the longest standing members? Or is it majority/survival of the fittest? And finally, is Tolkien part of this community? Does he get a say? He definitely does! Because even if we are an interpretive community and think ourselves 'free' we use his words as boundaries. We do not tend to accept allegorical interpretations (I have seen these well and truly shot down in flames) and we are even asked to base our RPG characters on what Tolkien said about different races of Elves. We look up what Tolkien said in “Letters” or HoME. We might have our own ideas and responses but we still back them up and modify them according to what was laid down on the page – we don't just say what the heck we like. For all our intellectualising, the Author aint dead round these parts. Quote:
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#558 | ||
Corpus Cacophonous
Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: A green and pleasant land
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From my very first post on this thread: Quote:
As to who determines the boundaries, I would include all of those you mention, although (with the exception of the forum rules stipulated by the Admins and, to a lesser extent, the Mods), they are not generally formulated or imposed in any formal manner.
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#559 |
A Mere Boggart
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: under the bed
Posts: 4,737
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So, would you agree that the meaning of the text can be both defined by readers and by the Author?
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Gordon's alive!
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#560 | |
Corpus Cacophonous
Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: A green and pleasant land
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To clarify, the full meaning of the work can only lie with the individual reader (because it will mean something different to each individual). Aspects of that meaning may be shared.
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