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emdiar View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Topic: Bored of the Rings
    Posted: March 02 2005 at 08:30

Tolkien was a pretentious yawn loved exclusively by spotty, No Girlfreind, Dungeons and Dragons playing, sixth form nerds.     

Discuss.

Perception is truth, ergo opinion is fact.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 02 2005 at 08:40
I don't know who was Tolkien (I never met and talked with him), but I don't think his books are the really clever and so strong stuff as many people guess. And those "Rings" movies are just commercial releases with a lot of special effects but no strong actors' playings and images...
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 02 2005 at 08:51
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 02 2005 at 08:57
I completely agree,emperor. The only people I know who rate Tolkien highly are people with quite execrable taste in literature. People who claim that LOTR is a great piece of literature do so on the basis of an ignorance of what great literature is. When I was 13 I thought the greatest music in the world was made by Kiss. And why did I think this? Because I didn't know any better. As my musical horizon widened through my teens I realised that not only did Kiss NOT make the greatest music in the world,it wasn't any good at all really. And the same with books. When I was in my early teens I thought Tolkien and fantasy in general was great literature. Then I read Dickens and realised how wrong I was. Check the bookshelves of Tolkien fans. You won't find Kafka,Hardy,Woolf or any other truly great authors,only light entertainment of the most basic fantasy and sf kind. That's why they say LOTR is a great book,not because it actually is,but because they simply don't know any better. Tolkien is the Kiss of the literary world.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 02 2005 at 09:12

Saying Tolkien wrote literature, is like claiming the Illias and the Oddessey of Homerus, are more than just simple epic poems.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 02 2005 at 09:22

Originally posted by Pixel Pirate Pixel Pirate wrote:

I completely agree,emperor. The only people I know who rate Tolkien highly are people with quite execrable taste in literature. People who claim that LOTR is a great piece of literature do so on the basis of an ignorance of what great literature is. When I was 13 I thought the greatest music in the world was made by Kiss. And why did I think this? Because I didn't know any better. As my musical horizon widened through my teens I realised that not only did Kiss NOT make the greatest music in the world,it wasn't any good at all really. And the same with books. When I was in my early teens I thought Tolkien and fantasy in general was great literature. Then I read Dickens and realised how wrong I was. Check the bookshelves of Tolkien fans. You won't find Kafka,Hardy,Woolf or any other truly great authors,only light entertainment of the most basic fantasy and sf kind. That's why they say LOTR is a great book,not because it actually is,but because they simply don't know any better. Tolkien is the Kiss of the literary world.

So, could you tell a fantasy book wich could be considered as 'great literature'? Or is it that fantasy is not good because it's not realist (or social commentary disguised as fantasy - see 'Animal Farm' and most of the great sci-fi works)? Most of the time the intelligentsia praises a fantasy novel, it's because it's magic-realism.

I usually like to make comparisons with movies: Is it that Ken Loach is good but 'Back to the Future' is not great moviemaking? Both are strong in their genres. Is it 'Schindler's List' great filmaking and 'Raiders of the Lost Ark' worthless to be in the companion of the greats works?

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 02 2005 at 09:22

Originally posted by tuxon tuxon wrote:

Not very good, in my opinion...

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 02 2005 at 09:27

Originally posted by Pixel Pirate Pixel Pirate wrote:

I completely agree,emperor. The only people I know who rate Tolkien highly are people with quite execrable taste in literature. People who claim that LOTR is a great piece of literature do so on the basis of an ignorance of what great literature is. When I was 13 I thought the greatest music in the world was made by Kiss. And why did I think this? Because I didn't know any better. As my musical horizon widened through my teens I realised that not only did Kiss NOT make the greatest music in the world,it wasn't any good at all really. And the same with books. When I was in my early teens I thought Tolkien and fantasy in general was great literature. Then I read Dickens and realised how wrong I was. Check the bookshelves of Tolkien fans. You won't find Kafka,Hardy,Woolf or any other truly great authors,only light entertainment of the most basic fantasy and sf kind. That's why they say LOTR is a great book,not because it actually is,but because they simply don't know any better. Tolkien is the Kiss of the literary world.

 

That's true, Pirate, all the good things can be recognizend in compare with something ;-) But the literature-business (as show-business, MTV, etc) does all things to promote those easy-reaching materials to trade it to masses... It's very profitable to them.

Well, if we're talking about literature, so what kinds of books our Prog-Colleagues prefer?

I try to read those books which can get the more stuff to think, to analize, to impress for myself.

Among classics I especially prefer Dante Alig'eri, William Shakespeare, Walter Scott, Morice Druone (hope I wrote right?), Dostoevsky; among 20th century autors I mostly like Jaroslav Hasek, Henry Miller, Ernest Hemminguay.

Of course, I also like to read some biographies of my favorite musicians  Plus I often read the kind of scientifical literature, mostly in psychological, historical, philosophical vein. For example, I'm a big fan of Fridrich Nitzsche.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 02 2005 at 09:30
[QUOTE=Paco Fox]

So, could you tell a fantasy book wich could be considered as 'great literature'?

 

I can... Many books by Herbert Walles, Azimov, Strugatsky brothers... Could Daniel Defo or Verne be considered as fantasy authors too?

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 02 2005 at 11:21
Originally posted by emdiar emdiar wrote:

Tolkien was a pretentious yawn loved exclusively by spotty, No Girlfreind, Dungeons and Dragons playing, sixth form nerds.     

Discuss.



Substitute "Tolkien was" ... with "prog rock is" ... and what do you get?  

I love 'em both ... Tolkien is far from the greatest writer ever ... but he took the trouble to create a world that I find enthralling ... 
"Death to Utopia! Death to faith! Death to love! Death to hope?" thunders the 20th century. "Surrender, you pathetic dreamer.”

"No" replies the unhumbled optimist "You are only the present."
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 02 2005 at 11:29

I havn`t read any Talkien, is not my cup of tea. But I understand that the making of a world with different species, geography, language and laws ain't no easy job. Maybe is not good literature, but is an outstanding work.

And my tastes in literature goes from Kafka to Kundera (I like Prague, what can I say...) and anything in between (Hemigway, Faulkner, Miller, Montanelli, Borges, Sabato and so on).

Edited, by suggestion of a good friend



Edited by mirco
Please forgive me for my crappy english!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 02 2005 at 11:42
Originally posted by emdiar emdiar wrote:

Tolkien was a pretentious yawn loved exclusively by spotty, No Girlfreind, Dungeons and Dragons playing, sixth form nerds.     

Discuss.

Tolkien's literature is perfectly acceptable as a piece of Literature-in the academic sense of the word. LOTR,which to be honest I find a very difficult read these days,is of it's time (ie stylistically dated) but the subject matter bears no relation to its merits as a piece of art.

One cannot presume that,purely because one might devour the works of, say,Nietsche,that one is better read or more cerebral.To be an expert in any field one needs a broad experience of all the different forms of literature not just one's that make you appear intellectual.A serious Literature student will take pleasure in the works of Dickens,Austen Shakespeare, Hemingway, Homer,Plato and Joyce.No one in their right mind would just read,say Plato and exclude all else.
If one where to announce to friends that one was reading the Iliad they might be suitably impressed but announce LOTR as one's latest book and there would be hoots of derision.This is ludicrous and ignorant.




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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 02 2005 at 14:08

I love Lord of the Rings, and I don't care how "great" a book it is. It's an epic tale which engulfs me when I read it, and that's what I want. I wouldn't say I have "quite execrable taste in literature", either; I'm certainly not at all a fan of any of the frankly indistinguishable bestsellers of today. In terms of fantasy I don't like all that much, apart from Tolkien's works and Stephen Donaldson (who I'm sure is technically a better writer, yet interests me less). Perhaps it's because I read The Hobbit when I was 5 or 6, and that's influenced my tastes over the rest of my life? In fact I still read "children's" books from time to time, and find them far more rewarding than at least some adults' books. Alice in Wonderland is an incredibly clever book, as are Swift's satires. And the Chronicles of Narnia and Black Cauldron series, while I won't claim are anything challenging or particularly subtle, still move me. Incidentally, I just picked up a book called "On Raven's Wing", or somesuch, which is based on Irish folk tales and seems quite nice.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 02 2005 at 14:49
Originally posted by goose goose wrote:

I love Lord of the Rings, and I don't care how "great" a book it is. It's an epic tale which engulfs me when I read it, and that's what I want. I wouldn't say I have "quite execrable taste in literature", either; I'm certainly not at all a fan of any of the frankly indistinguishable bestsellers of today. In terms of fantasy I don't like all that much, apart from Tolkien's works and Stephen Donaldson (who I'm sure is technically a better writer, yet interests me less). Perhaps it's because I read The Hobbit when I was 5 or 6, and that's influenced my tastes over the rest of my life? In fact I still read "children's" books from time to time, and find them far more rewarding than at least some adults' books. Alice in Wonderland is an incredibly clever book, as are Swift's satires. And the Chronicles of Narnia and Black Cauldron series, while I won't claim are anything challenging or particularly subtle, still move me. Incidentally, I just picked up a book called "On Raven's Wing", or somesuch, which is based on Irish folk tales and seems quite nice.

Sorry,goose. And the rest of you. I didn't really mean it. It's just that literary discussion always brings out the insufferable intellectual snob in me,and he really is an obnoxius git I wish I could somehow be able to kill off once and for all,but it seems he's destined to reside within me for the rest of my days,my only hope is to curb his cruel barbs as much as possible. Shutting up entirely when the subject of literature comes up would be a good start!

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 02 2005 at 14:58

Originally posted by Pixel Pirate Pixel Pirate wrote:

Sorry,goose. And the rest of you. I didn't really mean it. It's just that literary discussion always brings out the insufferable intellectual snob in me,and he really is an obnoxius git I wish I could somehow be able to kill off once and for all,but it seems he's destined to reside within me for the rest of my days,my only hope is to curb his cruel barbs as much as possible. Shutting up entirely when the subject of literature comes up would be a good start!

Why would you want to do that Pixel?

You are entitled to your opinion no matter how ridiculous it is (LOLWink)

Seriously though, as has been stated often on these hallowed pages,you cant have a good argument if everyone agrees!




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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 02 2005 at 15:04
Originally posted by Reed Lover Reed Lover wrote:

Originally posted by Pixel Pirate Pixel Pirate wrote:

Sorry,goose. And the rest of you. I didn't really mean it. It's just that literary discussion always brings out the insufferable intellectual snob in me,and he really is an obnoxius git I wish I could somehow be able to kill off once and for all,but it seems he's destined to reside within me for the rest of my days,my only hope is to curb his cruel barbs as much as possible. Shutting up entirely when the subject of literature comes up would be a good start!

Why would you want to do that Pixel?

You are entitled to your opinion no matter how ridiculous it is (LOLWink)

Seriously though, as has been stated often on these hallowed pages,you cant have a good argument if everyone agrees!

But I don't really like arguments,truly I don't,I just find myself drawn into them against my better judgement. I just want everyone in the world to get along with each other. And I'm not being funny! Well,not intentionally anyway.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 02 2005 at 15:10

At the risk of sounding hopelessly, self-aggrandizingly erudite, I consider myself to be among the most well-read people I know, with taste in literature that runs from the classics to sci-fi.  I read voraciously, and consume as many as five or six books a month, which I have done for well over 25 years.  I read "classic" lit, politics, religion, science, nature, lit-crit, psychology, novels, you-name-it.  There are few subjects I have not read - extensively.

I hapen not only to love Tolkien, but to consider him among the most important, creative and amazing writers of any time.  One can like or dislike the world he created or the stories he tells.  But his writing - as writing - is among the most expressive, detailed, poetic and beautiful writing in English literature.  Does he rank with Chaucer, Shakespeare, Milton, Joyce, et al?  Obviously not.  But that does not make him any less great, or even important.

Although Jules Verne and H.G. Wells set the tone that brought us the greats of sci-fi - Asimov, Bradbury, Clarke, Heinlein, et al - Tolkien was also an "influence" on sci-fi, particularly Frank Herbert: I daresay we might not have the Dune series (among other classics) without Tolkien.

The very fact that Tolkien, and LOTR, have become as cherished, beloved and, yes, historically important vis-a-vis English literature, as they have is a testament to how great Tolkien was as a writer.

Peace.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 02 2005 at 15:16
Originally posted by Pixel Pirate Pixel Pirate wrote:

Originally posted by Reed Lover Reed Lover wrote:

Originally posted by Pixel Pirate Pixel Pirate wrote:

Sorry,goose. And the rest of you. I didn't really mean it. It's just that literary discussion always brings out the insufferable intellectual snob in me,and he really is an obnoxius git I wish I could somehow be able to kill off once and for all,but it seems he's destined to reside within me for the rest of my days,my only hope is to curb his cruel barbs as much as possible. Shutting up entirely when the subject of literature comes up would be a good start!

Why would you want to do that Pixel?

You are entitled to your opinion no matter how ridiculous it is (LOLWink)

Seriously though, as has been stated often on these hallowed pages,you cant have a good argument if everyone agrees!

But I don't really like arguments,truly I don't,I just find myself drawn into them against my better judgement. I just want everyone in the world to get along with each other. And I'm not being funny! Well,not intentionally anyway.

I mean argument in the sense of "debate" as oppose to row!LOL




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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 02 2005 at 15:23

Tolkien was a professor of Medieval literature and an expert on old English, which he considered to be superior to the watered down language we've spoken since the Norman conquest. Personally I find the books almost unreadably boring, but I recognise that they are the product of a great and well informed imagination. I really enjoyed the films, but I've always been a bit of a pleb like that.

As for a fantasy book that could be considered as Literature (with a big capital L) - George RR Martin's A Song Of Ice And Fire is genuinely epic in scope and totally gripping, with complex and well rounded characters. Fantasy for people who don't like fantasy.

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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 02 2005 at 16:57

I also recommend Mervyn Peake, a contemporary and friend of Tolkien.  His Gormenghast trilogy is among the greats of that period of English literature.  His style is more poetic than Tolkien's, more "flowing."  If Tolkien's forte is in the incredibly detailed description of the world he created, Peake's forte is his characterizations: the characters in Gormenghast almost literally leap out of the page.

By the way, although I do not currently have a girlfriend, I never played Dungeons and Dragons,  would never have been "sixth form" (even had I been in British schools), and was never considered a "nerd" (though I was always admittedly "weird"...).

Peace.

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