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mirco
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Posted: March 03 2005 at 09:36 |
I am the worst case, i'm "hopelless"
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Please forgive me for my crappy english!
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emdiar
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Location: Netherlands
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Points: 890
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Posted: March 03 2005 at 10:20 |
maani wrote:
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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Hi Maani. I think you may have become a 6th former, had you attended a British school (unless you were so incredibly brainy that you'd finished "high school" by the age of 12 or 13, and then gone on to do 6th form studies with the 16/17yr olds. This happens very rarely and usually makes the national news. These kids are always ubbernerds!) . Without the "A level" certificates taken as a 6th former you would not have got a place in any university.
ps. I have nothing against Tolkien, actually. TLOTR is not really my cup of tea, but my real issues lie with the affore mentioned D&D playing goons who worship it because it's the thing to do. (You may remember my post on "Catch 22".)
I like my sci-fi served with a healthy portion of tongue-in-cheekness. Give me D. Adams anyday.
Edited by emdiar
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Perception is truth, ergo opinion is fact.
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Fragile
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Posted: March 03 2005 at 14:06 |
Trust cerifiable Certified to get a dig against the greatest prog band ever on a topic concerning a great piece of literature
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Manunkind
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Posted: March 03 2005 at 16:44 |
Has there ever been a "What are you reading?" thread on Progarchives, anyway? I'd love to see this one turn into such a thread...
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"In war there is no time to teach or learn Zen. Carry a strong stick. Bash your attackers." - Zen Master Ikkyu Sojun
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tuxon
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Posted: March 03 2005 at 17:08 |
Manunkind wrote:
Has there ever been a "What are you reading?" thread on Progarchives, anyway? I'd love to see this one turn into such a thread...
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What are you reading then?
I'm busy reading Karakter from Ferdinand Johan Wilhelm Christiaan Karel Emiel Bordewijk (Ferdinant Bordewijk for short), the movie won an Oscar a couple of years back.
A great tale about a boy, and his dominant father (by whom he isn't raised BTW). It's all about caracter, and facing challenges, and how it makes one a better person.
A sadder and a wiser man He rose the morrow morn (S.T. Coleridge)
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I'm always almost unlucky _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Id5ZcnjXSZaSMFMC Id5LM2q2jfqz3YxT
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Manunkind
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Posted: March 03 2005 at 17:29 |
I'm reading "Medieval Panorama.The English Scene from Conquest to Reformation" by C. G. Coulton. Basically a very detailed description of life in medieval England, from the court through the clergy and down all the way to the poorest of folk.
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"In war there is no time to teach or learn Zen. Carry a strong stick. Bash your attackers." - Zen Master Ikkyu Sojun
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maani
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Posted: March 03 2005 at 17:51 |
Ivan said: "Even when my experience with LOTR comes from the movies and from descriptive analysis of Tolkien works, it's clear for me that a fight between elfs, humans, hobbits, dwarfs and other species against evil will never be considered a masterpiece of literature."
I suppose that means that Milton's "Paradise Lost" - with its angels, demons, Satan, etc., and its "good against evil" context - can't possibly rank as "literature" either, much less a "masterpiece" of it...
Peace.
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Manunkind
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Posted: March 03 2005 at 18:10 |
maani wrote:
I suppose that means that Milton's "Paradise Lost" - with its angels, demons, Satan, etc., and its "good against evil" context - can't possibly rank as "literature" either, much less a "masterpiece" of it...
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Well, this is just the thing that people like T. S. Eliot and Ezra Pound said of "Paradise Lost."
It just goes to show that even professional poets who read enough books to fill the moon with, can be way out of touch.
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"In war there is no time to teach or learn Zen. Carry a strong stick. Bash your attackers." - Zen Master Ikkyu Sojun
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James Lee
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Posted: March 03 2005 at 20:10 |
Certif1ed wrote:
I find Tolkein's style disengaging, repetitive and irritating and feel that the entire trilogy could have been cut down to a single book with ease by using a more economic style.
I don't think it's particularly amazing... but then I've never tried to read it all the way through more than once, so I'll withhold my judgement until that day I manage to finish reading it a couple more times and gain a better understanding.
Neither am I a literature student, although I do have a mild interest. I read "Ulysses" twice; Once to say that I had and the second time to see if I could understand any of it the second time... I preferred "Portrait of an Artist" and "Dubliners", as I did not have to have an extensive knowledge of Classical literature in order to get either. "Finnegan's Wake" I never finished. 
For now, the 3 LOTR books are like the Yes albums I own; Overlong, overblown, full of fantastical nonsense, generally poorly delivered - although with some interesting bits - but largely with pretty covers that pad my collection out nicely.
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I've disagreed with just about everyone else on the forum at some point, so I suppose sooner or later I'd have to disagree with Cert. 
I appreciate Tolkien's style the same way I appreciate Lovecraft's style, or Mervyn Peake's; call it a reactionary stance, or affectation, or whatever you please. Writers have the option of assuming a voice that suits their material, and an 'economic' or journalistically influenced style would have done little justice to Tolkien's vision. He does get a little repetitive, though- but remember that it was begun in serial form and perhaps he needed to remind readers of certain things. Maybe he didn't completely have the writing chops to pull it off flawlessly, but his prose succeeds in supporting the archaic and intricate elements of both the narrative and the larger world around the events of the story.
It's a totally different beast from Ulysses, or Finnegans Wake; they have incredible external demands on the reader which make them perfect as an example of 'high art' (though for many people I suspect that it's easier to agree that Joyce writes great literature than actually read his works and decide for themselves). With Tolkien, you don't need to bring anything else to the works (although a dictionary would be nice, and an acquaintance with older British idioms would have made my first few readings a little easier).
But then again I love Yes as well. 'Overblown nonsense' may not necessarily be something I object to...good thing I found prog. 
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Ivan_Melgar_M
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Posted: March 03 2005 at 22:50 |
Paco Fox wrote:
You see? This is where it all ends: Tolkien can never be considered good literature because it's fantasy. People who dismiss Tolkien usually do so on three basis:
a) It is a sometimes boring: It's absolutly true that the first part of the book (until the Council) wanders quite a bit, as it's been proved the author didn't know where he was heading. This is an objective fact.
b) It is sometimes difficult to read. But, come on: I've read Don Quixote (in my language: it's not the same when translated) and it's not preciselly that easy. And on the fantasy front, Gonzalo Torrente Ballester 'La Saga Fuga de J.B.' is almost impossible, and it's reagarded as a great piece of literature (not by me, of course)
C) The most important: I deals with fantasy creatures and places. It seems there are people who just can't handle that. So this book is worthless because it's not, in their minds, serious. That is bullsh*t. 'La Celestina' is one of the best spanish realist books and I simple can't stand it. And I don't go saying it's sh*t. It's a great book of a theme and style I just don't like. |
Never said boring, or it's difficult to read or it's worthless.
I was forced to read La Celestina in school and Literature class in the University and still find it absolutely boring
But I accept Maani and Reed's comment, I should have not given so strong affirmations based in a movie and written works about Tolkien, just bought The Lord of the Rings Box Set (What I didn't believe I would ever do), so I can give a more fair opinion in a couple of weks.
Iván
Edited by ivan_2068
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Reed Lover
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Points: 5187
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Posted: March 04 2005 at 03:44 |
ivan_2068 wrote:
But I accept Maani and Reed's comment, I should have not given so strong affirmations based in a movie and written works about Tolkien, just bought The Lord of the Rings Box Set (What I didn't believe I would ever do), so I can give a more fair opinion in a couple of weks.
Iván
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Having to read the whole damn trilogy is a suitable penance,Ivan.
Hope it reads better in Spanish than it does in English!
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Certif1ed
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Posted: March 04 2005 at 03:48 |
James Lee wrote:
Certif1ed wrote:
I find Tolkein's style disengaging, repetitive and irritating and feel that the entire trilogy could have been cut down to a single book with ease by using a more economic style.
I don't think it's particularly amazing... but then I've never tried to read it all the way through more than once, so I'll withhold my judgement until that day I manage to finish reading it a couple more times and gain a better understanding.
Neither am I a literature student, although I do have a mild interest. I read "Ulysses" twice; Once to say that I had and the second time to see if I could understand any of it the second time... I preferred "Portrait of an Artist" and "Dubliners", as I did not have to have an extensive knowledge of Classical literature in order to get either. "Finnegan's Wake" I never finished. 
For now, the 3 LOTR books are like the Yes albums I own; Overlong, overblown, full of fantastical nonsense, generally poorly delivered - although with some interesting bits - but largely with pretty covers that pad my collection out nicely.
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I've disagreed with just about everyone else on the forum at some point, so I suppose sooner or later I'd have to disagree with Cert. 
I appreciate Tolkien's style the same way I appreciate Lovecraft's style, or Mervyn Peake's; call it a reactionary stance, or affectation, or whatever you please. Writers have the option of assuming a voice that suits their material, and an 'economic' or journalistically influenced style would have done little justice to Tolkien's vision. He does get a little repetitive, though- but remember that it was begun in serial form and perhaps he needed to remind readers of certain things. Maybe he didn't completely have the writing chops to pull it off flawlessly, but his prose succeeds in supporting the archaic and intricate elements of both the narrative and the larger world around the events of the story.
It's a totally different beast from Ulysses, or Finnegans Wake; they have incredible external demands on the reader which make them perfect as an example of 'high art' (though for many people I suspect that it's easier to agree that Joyce writes great literature than actually read his works and decide for themselves). With Tolkien, you don't need to bring anything else to the works (although a dictionary would be nice, and an acquaintance with older British idioms would have made my first few readings a little easier).
But then again I love Yes as well. 'Overblown nonsense' may not necessarily be something I object to...good thing I found prog. 
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I wasn't really trying to compare Tolkien with Joyce - I was just rambling as usual... The repetitiveness I really find hard to swallow is in the narrative itself. I can't recall exact passages, but you get stuff like "They looked around at the green wood in the green vale, where all around was green. The grass was green, the wood was green, the vale was green and the birds were green. A green mist hovered greenly as they waded through the deep, green grass by the green river. Did I mention everything was green...?"
OK, I'm inventing and exaggerating for illustrative purposes - and I've only read the trilogy once - but that kind of thing made reading the story heavy going for me; it distracted rather than involved me.
My comparisons with Yes are similarly tongue-in-cheek 
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Pixel Pirate
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Posted: March 04 2005 at 04:34 |
Manunkind wrote:
maani wrote:
I suppose that means that Milton's "Paradise Lost" - with its angels, demons, Satan, etc., and its "good against evil" context - can't possibly rank as "literature" either, much less a "masterpiece" of it...
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Well, this is just the thing that people like T. S. Eliot and Ezra Pound said of "Paradise Lost."
It just goes to show that even professional poets who read enough books to fill the moon with, can be way out of touch.
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If I go to my grave defending just one point of view,it will be that "Paradise Lost" is one of the most over-rated pieces of literature ever,and Eliot and Pound were absolutely right in their condemnation of it. If you get right down to it it contains nothing but religious ravings without value to anyone but people suffering from the same religious dementia that possessed Milton. And the older I get the more I tend to the view, held by a growing number of people actually,that the authors one just HAS to read constitute a very small group indeed. Someone once listed only five,actually. Shakespeare and Ibsen were two of them,but I can't recall the other three,but Milton was not one of them. The crustier and grumpier I get as middleage slowly fastens it's claw around my throat,the more I believe it's true.
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Odi profanum vulgus et arceo.
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Manunkind
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Joined: February 02 2005
Location: Poland
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Posted: March 04 2005 at 05:06 |
Pixel Pirate wrote:
Manunkind wrote:
maani wrote:
I suppose that means that Milton's "Paradise Lost" - with its angels, demons, Satan, etc., and its "good against evil" context - can't possibly rank as "literature" either, much less a "masterpiece" of it...
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Well, this is just the thing that people like T. S. Eliot and Ezra Pound said of "Paradise Lost."
It just goes to show that even professional poets who read enough books to fill the moon with, can be way out of touch.
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If I go to my grave defending just one point of view,it will be that "Paradise Lost" is one of the most over-rated pieces of literature ever,and Eliot and Pound were absolutely right in their condemnation of it. If you get right down to it it contains nothing but religious ravings without value to anyone but people suffering from the same religious dementia that possessed Milton. And the older I get the more I tend to the view, held by a growing number of people actually,that the authors one just HAS to read constitute a very small group indeed. Someone once listed only five,actually. Shakespeare and Ibsen were two of them,but I can't recall the other three,but Milton was not one of them. The crustier and grumpier I get as middleage slowly fastens it's claw around my throat,the more I believe it's true.
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I don't agree with you, I think that given the circumstances in which Milton wrote his epic (imprisonment, impending blindness), "Paradise Lost" is far from a piece of fanatical propaganda. I think it's more of a complaint made by someone cruelly afflicted by fate, someone who can find comfort neither in his God (the part devoted to God is bland, flat and strangely cynical) nor in His hellish adversary, with whom one can sympathise somewhat at the beginning, but who then degenerates more and more as he wallows in his hatred and desire for vengeance and thenceases being a person and becomes a snake. No loving God above and no means of successful rebellion; a very bitter work. That's my reading of it, anyway. I can't rememeber the reasons Eliot gave for his verdict on Milton, but it's just possible that Eliot (a Christian) shied away from Milton's conclusions. Still, Eliot was always a better critic than Pound, he could even find a kind word or two for the romantics whom he allegedly hated so much, whereas the latter, despite making some intellingent insights of his own, could be very murky or downright stupid. One of the things Pound found so lamenatble in Milton was the latter's "animal-like Hebraism"   . I rest my case.
Edited by Manunkind
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"In war there is no time to teach or learn Zen. Carry a strong stick. Bash your attackers." - Zen Master Ikkyu Sojun
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James Lee
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Posted: March 04 2005 at 05:27 |
Perhaps the most important aspect of a work of literature is not the airtight quality of the work, but the amount and duration of the effect it has on human thought and expression. Shakespeare and The Bible must top the list in almost any estimation, but Milton and Dante have to rank in the upper circles (LOL) as well. One can barely go a day without encountering some of the language or imagery that these works have passed down to us...whatever our estimation of their literary merits.
Tolkien ranks a little farther down the list, but maybe not as far as some would argue he deserves. I would argue that his work has deeply and endurably touched a comparable number of lives as Ibsen, though the latter is obviously much more of a genius in his depiction of the extremes of human emotion and relations.
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Pixel Pirate
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Posted: March 04 2005 at 05:30 |
James Lee wrote:
Perhaps the most important aspect of a work of literature is not the airtight quality of the work, but the amount and duration of the effect it has on human thought and expression. Shakespeare and The Bible must top the list in almost any estimation, but Milton and Dante have to rank in the upper circles (LOL) as well. One can barely go a day without encountering some of the language or imagery that these works have passed down to us...whatever our estimation of their literary merits.
Tolkien ranks a little farther down the list, but maybe not as far as some would argue he deserves. I would argue that his work has deeply and endurably touched a comparable number of lives as Ibsen, though the latter is obviously much more of a genius in his depiction of the extremes of human emotion and relations.
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That is a good point,and one that keeps slipping my mind. Thanks for reminding me,James!
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Odi profanum vulgus et arceo.
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goose
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Posted: March 04 2005 at 11:00 |
James Lee wrote:
an acquaintance with older British idioms would have made my first few readings a little easier |
I think it must be more British than older that is the problem; I don't think there were any phrases that I failed to understand immediately, even if I wouldn't use them myself.
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FloydWright
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Posted: March 04 2005 at 15:21 |
With the mention of "high art" comes an important question...and this is one that's important (I think) for progheads considering the music they're into, as well as for literature.
What is the ultimate purpose of art? At what point does inaccessibility due to an unusual or long-winded style become a problem rather than an accomplishment? Should art be written for the sake of art, or should it be written with an audience in mind? And what audience?
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James Lee
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Posted: March 04 2005 at 23:50 |
goose wrote:
James Lee wrote:
an acquaintance with older British idioms would have made my first few readings a little easier |
I think it must be more British than older that is the problem; I don't think there were any phrases that I failed to understand immediately, even if I wouldn't use them myself.
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I didn't know what barrows or wains were, for instance...but I was in the single digits during my first reading.
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goose
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Posted: March 05 2005 at 12:38 |
Hmm I should think I'd have had troubles with "wain" too, but I can't remember ever having to look a word up. Maybe I just asked my mum.
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