Examines Tolkien’s ability to hold two conflicting ways of thinking in creative tension, representing them through equally sympathetic characters each fairly having their own say, as he does in “The Homecoming of Beorhtnoth Beorhthelm’s Son.” Grybauskas finds a parallel to this in the way Battle of Maldon balances its praise of Northern courage with its censure of the Earl of Maldon’s Ofermod
Deals with the decline in power of evil through the ages of Arda, and how this is connected with pha...
This paper explores connections between J.R.R. Tolkien’s 1953 Essays and Studies publication The Hom...
The Ainulindalë shows that in Middle-earth war is not an option: the seeds of harmony and discordanc...
J.R.R. Tolkien once referred to The Lord of the Rings as a "rather bitter, and very terrifying roman...
A close look at “The Battle of Maldon” and how Tolkien’s opinion of Bryhtnoth’s actions echoes throu...
J.R.R. Tolkien once referred to The Lord of the Rings as a “rather bitter, and very terrifying roman...
Considers the application of speech act theory to Tolkien’s “The Homecoming of Beorhtnoth Beorhthelm...
Describes the Battle of the Somme and Tolkien’s participation in it. Pointing out the parallels betw...
World War I devastated a generation of men and women with its technologies of mass destruction and i...
The Lord of the Rings, though unique in many ways, is only one of a series of fantasies published by...
Discusses the impact of World War II on the themes and style of The Lord of the Rings, and particula...
Examines polarized reactions to The Lord of the Rings as both a pro-war and pacifistic work. Sees it...
This thesis analyzes perceptions of abilities in J.R.R. Tolkien’s 1954 novel, The Lord of the Rings ...
A close comparison of Wagner’s Ring Cycle and the history of the One Ring in Tolkien’s legendarium w...
Examines “the northern spirit” in Tolkien’s fiction, the tension between the spirit of “uttermost en...
Deals with the decline in power of evil through the ages of Arda, and how this is connected with pha...
This paper explores connections between J.R.R. Tolkien’s 1953 Essays and Studies publication The Hom...
The Ainulindalë shows that in Middle-earth war is not an option: the seeds of harmony and discordanc...
J.R.R. Tolkien once referred to The Lord of the Rings as a "rather bitter, and very terrifying roman...
A close look at “The Battle of Maldon” and how Tolkien’s opinion of Bryhtnoth’s actions echoes throu...
J.R.R. Tolkien once referred to The Lord of the Rings as a “rather bitter, and very terrifying roman...
Considers the application of speech act theory to Tolkien’s “The Homecoming of Beorhtnoth Beorhthelm...
Describes the Battle of the Somme and Tolkien’s participation in it. Pointing out the parallels betw...
World War I devastated a generation of men and women with its technologies of mass destruction and i...
The Lord of the Rings, though unique in many ways, is only one of a series of fantasies published by...
Discusses the impact of World War II on the themes and style of The Lord of the Rings, and particula...
Examines polarized reactions to The Lord of the Rings as both a pro-war and pacifistic work. Sees it...
This thesis analyzes perceptions of abilities in J.R.R. Tolkien’s 1954 novel, The Lord of the Rings ...
A close comparison of Wagner’s Ring Cycle and the history of the One Ring in Tolkien’s legendarium w...
Examines “the northern spirit” in Tolkien’s fiction, the tension between the spirit of “uttermost en...
Deals with the decline in power of evil through the ages of Arda, and how this is connected with pha...
This paper explores connections between J.R.R. Tolkien’s 1953 Essays and Studies publication The Hom...
The Ainulindalë shows that in Middle-earth war is not an option: the seeds of harmony and discordanc...