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7th October 2019: New publication, Music in Tolkien's Work and Beyond

Music in Tolkien's Work and Beyond

We are pleased to announce our latest publication Music in Tolkien's Work and Beyond , edited by Julian Eilmann & Friedhelm Schneidewind.

"I love music" (J.R.R. Tolkien)

Music plays a crucial role in Tolkien's mythology, and his tales contain many songs as well as mentions of musicians and instruments.

The present book edited by Julian Eilmann and Friedhelm Schneidewind is the successor to the well-received 2010 volume Music in Middle-earth, No. 20 of the Cormarë Series, which drew the attention of Tolkien scholarship to the importance and nature of music in Tolkien's work. As the title of this volume suggests, Music in Tolkien's work and Beyond simultaneously follows the path of analyzing the use and significance of music and musical elements in Tolkien's literary texts while also considering the broader context, such as adaptations and other authors and composers.

(read more)

table of contents | abstracts | cover | companion volume | german version | announcements | more

This volume will be presented at the upcoming Tolkien Conference in Jena (11th-13th October 2019)

(to link to this announcement: http://www.walking-tree.org/news_archive.php?item=158 )

23rd September 2019: New publication, "Something Has Gone Crack": New Perspectives on J.R.R.Tolkien in the Great War

Something Has Gone Crack: New Perspectives on J.R.R.Tolkien in the Great War

We are pleased to announce our latest publication "Something Has Gone Crack": New Perspectives on J.R.R.Tolkien in the Great War , edited by Janet Brennan Croft & Annika Röttinger.

"Something has gone crack," Tolkien wrote about the first death among his tight-knit fellowship of friends in 1916, and the impact of the war haunted his writing for the rest of his life. In Tolkien's body of work, the Great War serves as a source of imagery, motifs, and examples of military operations and strategy; of central themes about conflict, comradeship, duty, and the destruction of the environment; and of personal trauma which he worked out in meaningful symbolic form throughout his life. (read more)

table of contents | cover | announcements

This volume will be presented at the upcoming Tolkien Conference in Jena (11th-13th October 2019)

(to link to this announcement: http://www.walking-tree.org/news_archive.php?item=157 )

16th September 2019: Tolkien Conference 2019

The 2019 Tolkien Conference will be held at Jena University (Germany) from 11th to 13th October 2019.

The conference topic is Power and Authority in Tolkien's Work

The event programme can be downloaded here. The poster can be downloaded here (both as pdfs).

Jena Tolkien conference 2019

(to link to this announcement: http://www.walking-tree.org/conference/?year=2019 )

7th August 2019: Tolkien and the Classics published

We are pleased to announce our latest publication, Tolkien and the Classics, edited by Roberto Arduini, Giampaolo Canzonieri & Claudio A. Testi.

The origins of this collection are twofold. First, there is the ever-growing awareness of the importance of making scholars and critics realize how much J.R.R. Tolkien is, in all respects, a great literary classic, comparable to those already accepted as 'canonical'. Second, the desire to offer a publication that could be enjoyed, and made actual use of, by students and teachers of secondary schools and universities. This collection of mainly short essays, each one exploring a parallel between Tolkien and the Classics of Western literature, is divided into three sections:
Tolkien and Authors from Antiquity (four essays)
Tolkien and Authors from the Middle Ages (six essays)
Tolkien and Authors from the Modern Period (eleven essays)

read more ...

table of contents | cover | announcements

(to link to this announcement: http://www.walking-tree.org/news_archive.php?item=155 )

10th July 2019: Three book reviews in Journal of Tolkien Research


Three reviews of our recent books have been published in Journal of Tolkien Research (Vol. 7, Iss. 1, 2019).

The reviews can be read on the site of Valparaiso University. Clicking on the covers above takes readers directly to the reviews of the respective books on that site. The links are also collected on our site here (with links to our pages on these books).

(to link to this announcement: http://www.walking-tree.org/news_archive.php?item=154 )

9th July 2019: Call for papers — Lewis & Tolkien

It is rather common knowledge amongst the scholars of both Lewis and Tolkien that, although the former played quite a significant role in encouraging the latter to first publish The Hobbit and then to complete The Lord of the Rings, the creator of Middle-earth was never able (or, it seems, even willing) to appreciate the stories set in the land of Narnia. The actual reason(s) may now appear to be somewhat obscure (Tolkien is not known to have been particularly vocal about the matter), but, as he once remarked in a letter to Eileen Edgar (1972), his dislike of Lewis's septology resulted simply from "a difference of taste", doubtlessly caused by Tolkien's well-known aversion to allegory (and religious didactic allegory in particular).

Continue reading here (pdf) ...

 
The Songs of the Spheres
Lewis, Tolkien and the Overlapping Realms of their Imaginations
Edited by Łukasz Neubauer and Guglielmo Spirito

(to link to this announcement: http://www.walking-tree.org/news_archive.php?item=153 )

25th February 2019: Sub-creating Arda published

We are pleased to announce our latest publication Sub-creating Arda: World-building in J.R.R. Tolkien's Works, its Precursors, and Legacies , edited by Dimitra Fimi and Thomas Honegger.

J.R.R. Tolkien's literary cosmos may not be the most elaborate of the imaginary worlds in existence, it is certainly the most influential. The posthumous editorial work of Tolkien's son Christopher has also shown that Arda remains unrivalled in its consistency and complexity. Additionally, the re-publication of Tolkien's Andrew Lang lecture 'On Fairy-stories' (originally delivered 1939) and its interpretation within the discourse of literary fantasy has further strengthened his position as one of the foremost proponents of literary world-building or, as he himself preferred to call it, (literary) subcreation.

The contributions to this volume by Tom Shippey, John Garth, Mark J.P. Wolf, Kristine Larsen, Andrew Higgins, Allan Turner, Gergely Nagy, Renée Vink, and a dozen other scholars, discuss not only Tolkien's theoretical concepts as well as his literary work but also explore the relationship between Tolkien's approach with that of other 'literary world-builders' whose imaginary worlds have attracted readers and scholars alike.

table of contents | abstracts | cover | announcements

(to link to this announcement: http://www.walking-tree.org/news_archive.php?item=152 )

4th February 2019: Call for papers Tolkien Conference 2019

The 16th Tolkien Conference will be held at the Friedrich-Schiller-University Jena from 11 to 13 October 2019. The topic is Power and Authority in the Works of JRR Tolkien. A call for papers has been published on this page of the DTG website.

DTG is also offering a conference scholarship for junior researchers in the field of Tolkien studies. Details of this and a contact address for aplicants are published on the same page.

(to link to this announcement: http://www.walking-tree.org/conference/19_jena.php )

21st January 2019: Call for papers Tolkien and the Classical World

Scholarship on J.R.R. Tolkien has become more and more interested in the topic of worldbuilding in the literature of the English fantasy novelist and academic. Critical explorations into how Tolkien constructed his worlds have covered various domains: the early Germanic, the medieval (more broadly), the modern, the natural, and the Christian world. What has not received more comprehensive exploration, however, is how the Classical world of Ancient Greece and Rome influenced the literature, scholarship, and thoughts of Tolkien. Given Tolkien's early schooling in and love of Latin and Ancient Greek language and literature, is it possible to reconstruct a Classical worldbuilding in Tolkien's works? (read more here).

(to link to this announcement: http://www.walking-tree.org/news_archive.php?item=150 )

21st January 2019: Announcing forthcoming publication: Sub-creating Arda

Walking Tree Publishers are pleased to announce the forthcoming publication of Sub-creating Arda: World-building in J.R.R. Tolkien's Works, its Precursors, and Legacies.

J.R.R. Tolkien's literary cosmos may not be the most elaborate of the imaginary worlds in existence, it is certainly the most influential. The posthumous editorial work of Tolkien's son Christopher has also shown that Arda remains unrivalled in its consistency and complexity. Additionally, the re-publication of Tolkien's Andrew Lang lecture 'On Fairy-stories' (originally delivered 1939) and its interpretation within the discourse of literary fantasy has further strengthened his position as one of the foremost proponents of literary world-building or, as he himself preferred to call it, (literary) subcreation.

The contributions to this volume by Tom Shippey, John Garth, Mark J.P. Wolf, Kristine Larsen, Andrew Higgins, Allan Turner, Gergely Nagy, Renée Vink, and a dozen other scholars, discuss not only Tolkien's theoretical concepts as well as his literary work but also explore the relationship between Tolkien's approach with that of other 'literary world-builders' whose imaginary worlds have attracted readers and scholars alike.

Sub-creating Arda: World-building in J.R.R. Tolkien's Works, its Precursors, and Legacies, Dimitra Fimi and Thomas Honegger (editors), Zurich and Berne 2019, Cormarë Series 40, ISBN 978-3-905703-40-5.

Cover illustration by Jay Johnstone.

Further information:

table of contents | abstracts | cover | announcements

(to link to this announcement: http://www.walking-tree.org/news_archive.php?item=149 )

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