Offers an opposing viewpoint on the “taming” of the woman warrior in Tolkien, suggesting that Éowyn’s rejection of the warrior’s life is a fulfillment of Tolkien’s theme of healing and rebirth rather than a subjection to a male partner
This paper reports on an early pilot project that asks women who self identify as readers or fans of...
The powerful, learned woman is a figure of fear in the works of Williams, seen as transgressing her ...
The majority of articles in this issue of Mythlore have to do with a selection of female characters ...
J.R.R. Tolkien is well-known for his feats in literature and the fantasy genre, especially concernin...
Critics, and even the general public, have noted the absence of women in The Lord of the Rings, an a...
Examines women in combat in a number of Tolkien’s and Lewis’s works, finding that their portrayals h...
Examines the presence and absence of female characters in Tolkien, in the Peter Jackson films, and i...
Two of Tolkien’s major works – The Silmarillion and The Lord of the Rings – have been criticized for...
Since Doris Myers’ 1971 essay exploring women in the works of the Inklings, there has been a flood o...
inspiring an intense fan base and Peter Jackson’s multimillion-dollar film series. However, the tril...
This paper explores the origin and purpose of one of Tolkien’s most highly debated characters: Eowyn...
Tolkien’s writing of female and racial minority characters has been criticized as misogynistic and r...
In my thesis I examine J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings (1954-55), the fantasy epic written on...
This summer, I attended the International Medieval Congress in Leeds, England, where I attended nume...
This paper begins by considering the nature of some of the stylised “evil” and “good” character type...
This paper reports on an early pilot project that asks women who self identify as readers or fans of...
The powerful, learned woman is a figure of fear in the works of Williams, seen as transgressing her ...
The majority of articles in this issue of Mythlore have to do with a selection of female characters ...
J.R.R. Tolkien is well-known for his feats in literature and the fantasy genre, especially concernin...
Critics, and even the general public, have noted the absence of women in The Lord of the Rings, an a...
Examines women in combat in a number of Tolkien’s and Lewis’s works, finding that their portrayals h...
Examines the presence and absence of female characters in Tolkien, in the Peter Jackson films, and i...
Two of Tolkien’s major works – The Silmarillion and The Lord of the Rings – have been criticized for...
Since Doris Myers’ 1971 essay exploring women in the works of the Inklings, there has been a flood o...
inspiring an intense fan base and Peter Jackson’s multimillion-dollar film series. However, the tril...
This paper explores the origin and purpose of one of Tolkien’s most highly debated characters: Eowyn...
Tolkien’s writing of female and racial minority characters has been criticized as misogynistic and r...
In my thesis I examine J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings (1954-55), the fantasy epic written on...
This summer, I attended the International Medieval Congress in Leeds, England, where I attended nume...
This paper begins by considering the nature of some of the stylised “evil” and “good” character type...
This paper reports on an early pilot project that asks women who self identify as readers or fans of...
The powerful, learned woman is a figure of fear in the works of Williams, seen as transgressing her ...
The majority of articles in this issue of Mythlore have to do with a selection of female characters ...