Tuesday, October 1, 2019
J.R.R.Tolkien: Master of Fantasy Essay -- John Ronald Reuel Tolkien Bi
John Ronald Reuel Tolkien (J.R.R.Tolkien) was a philologist in the very strict sense of the word. This term, philologist, comes from Greek [Ãâ à ¯Ã »Ã ¿Ãâ (philos) and à »ÃÅ'à ³Ã ¿Ãâ (logos)] and literarily means ââ¬Ëlove for wordsââ¬â¢. According to the Oxford Dictionary, it is ââ¬Å"the scientific study of the development of language or of a particular languageâ⬠, which is precisely what Tolkien did all through his life. Tolkien was, as has been said, a profound lover of words, which he begun developing from a quite early age. In 1900, when he and his family had to move to Birmingham in order to be closer to King Edwardââ¬â¢s School, Tolkien discovered Gaelic, a language toward which he showed a great interest and which ââ¬Å"opened him to another linguistic worldâ⬠(ââ¬Å"le abrià ³ otro mundo lingà ¼Ã sticoâ⬠, Carpenter, 2002:37). When he returned to King Edwardââ¬â¢s, after a year in St. Philipââ¬â¢s School, he started learning Greek; he already knew Latin as his mother had taught him at home. When his literature teacher read The Canterbury Tales, by Geoffrey Chaucer, in the original Middle-English ââ¬Å"he decided to learn more about the history of the languageâ⬠(Carpenter, 2002:39), ââ¬Å"why languages are as they areâ⬠(ââ¬Å"por quà © eran como eranâ⬠Carpenter, 2002:46). His discovery of Anglo-Saxon was also an important element in his approaching to philology. As can be seen, his encounter with these ââ¬Ënew-oldââ¬â¢ languages was continuous: Old Norse, Gothic, etc. It was also the starting point of his creation of private languages (Naffarin). Thanks to his deep study of these languages we have today works like The Silmarillion, The Hobbit, or The Lord of the Rings, as Tolkienââ¬â¢s imagination came not from any other place but from language itself, as Segura (2008) states saying that ââ¬Å"his imagination was... ...o. -Carretero, M. -ââ¬Å"Catastropheâ⬠. Oxford Learners Dictionaries. 2014. http://www.oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com/definition/english/catastrophe -Coleridge, S.T. 1984. Biographia Literaria. P.6. Princeton: Princeton University Press. -ââ¬Å"Eucatastropheâ⬠. Oxford Dictionaries, Language Matters. 2014. http://www.oxforddictionaries.com/es/definicion/ingles/eucatastrophe -Lewis, C.S. 2002. On Stories and Other Essays on Literature. EE.UU: Mariner Books. -Segura, E. 2008. J.R.R.Tolkien: Mitopoeia y Mitologà a, reflexiones bajo la luz refractada. Spain: Portal Editions. -Segura, E. 2001. El Viaje del Anillo: Mapa narrativo de la Tierra Media. -Tolkien, J.R.R. (lecture given in 1939). On Fairy Stories. -Tolkien, J.R.R. 19. The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers. -Olsen, C. 2010. On Fairy-Stories. http://www.festivalintheshire.com/journal5hts/5tolkienprofessor.html
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