Focuses on Tolkien’s narrative treatment in The Lord of the Rings and the “Ring as an emergent symbol of language itself.” Notes that through Tolkien’s “characterization of protagonists and antagonists, his use of sub-texts and ‘sub-authors,’ Tolkien demonstrates the ways in which magic and language are bound up with one another.
This thesis is an interdisciplinary study of Tolkien's writing, seeking to place his work within the...
Tolkien\u27s Wraiths, Rings, and Dragons: An Exercise in Literary Linguistics - Jason Fisher, winne...
The success of works such as The Lord of the Rings (J. R. R. Tolkien 1954), Star Trek (NBC 1966), Av...
Focuses on Tolkien’s narrative treatment in The Lord of the Rings and the “Ring as an emergent symbo...
J. R. R. Tolkien\u27s linguistic aesthetic as displayed in his invented languages, his use of hist...
In his detailed accounts concerning Middle-earth and its inhabitants throughout various Ages of exis...
As Tolkien himself asserted, his creative writing processes were fundamentally linguistic. They were...
The topic of this research is constructed languages in J. R. R. Tolkien’s fiction. It is important t...
This article situates Tolkien’s “A Secret Vice” (and its accompanying notes and papers) within the c...
There have been several books and online articles and courses published on Tolkien’s invented langu...
J.R.R. Tolkien is most famous for the fantasy series The Lord of the Rings, but long before he began...
There have been several books and online articles and courses published on Tolkien’s\ud invented lan...
J.R.R. Tolkien’s series, The Lord of the Rings, had a great impact on the literary world. Tolkien hi...
Current views on the translation of Tolkien are that his works are completely translatable and under...
“An analysis of how Tolkien uses language from the critical stance of chaos theory.
This thesis is an interdisciplinary study of Tolkien's writing, seeking to place his work within the...
Tolkien\u27s Wraiths, Rings, and Dragons: An Exercise in Literary Linguistics - Jason Fisher, winne...
The success of works such as The Lord of the Rings (J. R. R. Tolkien 1954), Star Trek (NBC 1966), Av...
Focuses on Tolkien’s narrative treatment in The Lord of the Rings and the “Ring as an emergent symbo...
J. R. R. Tolkien\u27s linguistic aesthetic as displayed in his invented languages, his use of hist...
In his detailed accounts concerning Middle-earth and its inhabitants throughout various Ages of exis...
As Tolkien himself asserted, his creative writing processes were fundamentally linguistic. They were...
The topic of this research is constructed languages in J. R. R. Tolkien’s fiction. It is important t...
This article situates Tolkien’s “A Secret Vice” (and its accompanying notes and papers) within the c...
There have been several books and online articles and courses published on Tolkien’s invented langu...
J.R.R. Tolkien is most famous for the fantasy series The Lord of the Rings, but long before he began...
There have been several books and online articles and courses published on Tolkien’s\ud invented lan...
J.R.R. Tolkien’s series, The Lord of the Rings, had a great impact on the literary world. Tolkien hi...
Current views on the translation of Tolkien are that his works are completely translatable and under...
“An analysis of how Tolkien uses language from the critical stance of chaos theory.
This thesis is an interdisciplinary study of Tolkien's writing, seeking to place his work within the...
Tolkien\u27s Wraiths, Rings, and Dragons: An Exercise in Literary Linguistics - Jason Fisher, winne...
The success of works such as The Lord of the Rings (J. R. R. Tolkien 1954), Star Trek (NBC 1966), Av...