Lord of the Rings: How To Read J.R.R. Tolkien

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 27 жов 2013
  • Carnegie Mellon University alumnus Michael D. C. Drout returned to campus for a talk on "How To Read J.R.R. Tolkien."
    Drout, a professor of English and director of the Center for the Study of the Medieval at Wheaton College in Norton, Mass, believes that Tolkien's immense and lasting popularity can be explained by a "perfect storm hypothesis."
    Read more at www.hss.cmu.edu/pressreleases/....

КОМЕНТАРІ • 502

  • @scottperry7311
    @scottperry7311 3 роки тому +38

    When you are young, you read Tolkien with a sense of wonder, at the complexity of the world he created and its discovery. When you are older you read Tolkien with the sense of understanding, marvel at the complexity of the world mirroring this one and how it follows familiar and comfortable and uncomfortable paths.

  • @PathikritGhosh007
    @PathikritGhosh007 2 роки тому +33

    Quite possibly one of the best lectures on Tolkien I've ever had the fortune of listening.

  • @mgtogno
    @mgtogno 4 роки тому +208

    Worth every second. Reading Tolkien transformed my life in a way that nothing ever did. Because, as he said, it is not a simple fairy tale, its an experience. And Tolkien for sure poured himself into his work, a part of his soul, and his suffering and the hope and nostalgia, the innocence preserved in the hearts of the unknowing (the hobbits) by sacrifice of those 5 hobbits, the goodness people are still capable of, even after so much pain and heartache. Selflessness, duty, honour. And he put in a happy ending, which we all know thats the real escapist part of it, in real life, this happy ending hardly ever come.

    • @pepestanley1994
      @pepestanley1994 2 роки тому +1

      Oh mein Gott.
      Es sind nur Buchstaben.

    • @Quaselfasel
      @Quaselfasel 2 роки тому +1

      @@pepestanley1994 "nur" Es kommt ja wohl auf die Kombination dieser Wörter und Buchstaben an. Warum schaust du dir das Video an, wenn HDR für dich nur Buchstaben ist?

    • @scottnolan2833
      @scottnolan2833 2 роки тому +2

      Yes I often liken reading Tolkien for the first time to being struck by lightning. I was forever changed.

    • @ScaricoOleoso
      @ScaricoOleoso 2 роки тому

      Reading Tolkien is worth every second. This speaker is not worth one. Funnier than any of his jokes would be if a little kid ran up and sprayed him in the crotch with a super soaker.

    • @frankshailes3205
      @frankshailes3205 Рік тому

      There are bittersweet endings with loss and partings as the Fourth Age begins. Life is never one or the other. That was Sauuron's (and Morgoth's) biggest mistake.

  • @Saph3939
    @Saph3939 10 років тому +425

    I clicked the play button, expecting to simply watch a minute or two just to see what this was about but was wholly unaware of how profusely I would be drawn into this video. If you are a fan of Tolkien's works I greatly suggest watching the entire thing. It was, to say in the very least, quite interesting

    • @vaahtobileet
      @vaahtobileet 4 роки тому +9

      @Johnny Rep ? it starts when you press the play button dumbass

    • @wooshbait36
      @wooshbait36 4 роки тому +5

      @@vaahtobileet Lol, some people...

    • @reencollett6835
      @reencollett6835 4 роки тому +2

      Agreed, Agreed!!

    • @danjackson4149
      @danjackson4149 3 роки тому +3

      many thanks! i was hop/clicking through the first part of this clip trying to gauge whether it was worth listening to and just as i was deciding to give up, glanced down thru the replies.
      your comment made me persist and the clip got really interesting. there's some very good insights.
      to return the favour (if you havent already come across it) give this book a go; isbn 978-1137269447

    • @Saph3939
      @Saph3939 3 роки тому

      @@danjackson4149 Thank you! I'll check it out!

  • @DrCorndog1
    @DrCorndog1 4 роки тому +105

    I strongly believe that Sam's simple line "Well, I'm back" fully encapsulates everything that is great about LotR, and here's Dr. Drout giving an hour-long presentation to make that point.

    • @silverdragon710
      @silverdragon710 4 роки тому +5

      it's a literal way to point out the hero of the story is sam and he has made a full circle in the monomythic hero journey.

    • @untruelie2640
      @untruelie2640 3 роки тому +7

      @@silverdragon710 I don't htink that he is THE hero of the story. He surely is A hero within the story, but in this context he is simply the last character in the book remaining, the final author of the "Red Book". The sense of textual tradition is not just a stylistic element, but a key feature of the whole tale (or, to be more precise, "epos"). Inside the main narrative frame, the story is written by Frodo after he returns to the Shire, before leaving Middle Earth. Thus, it primarily focusses on Frodo's perspective (when he is present) as well as the perspectives of the other characters. They told their parts of the story to Frodo and he combined all of that into the "Red Book", which is then finished by Sam. All four Hobbits have their own "hero's journey", but Sam's journey is the last one to end in the frame of the text, since Frodo has sailed to Aman and Merry and Pippin did not take part in the writing of the main text (although they are responsible for gathering part of the information that became the Appendix of TLotR). This is importanrt to understand: The "present" of the main narrative frame is Frodo sitting in his home and writing down the whole story. This is why there are frequent references to later events and the eventual fate of characters and places all over the text.

    • @silverdragon710
      @silverdragon710 3 роки тому +8

      @@untruelie2640 JRR Tolkien literally said Sam is the hero of the LotR.

    • @untruelie2640
      @untruelie2640 3 роки тому +8

      @@silverdragon710 Sorry, I didn't know that. However, what I said isn't necessarily wrong, just my conclusion was. My bad.

    • @Blakefulable
      @Blakefulable 2 роки тому

      Pretentious fucks.

  • @tombombadil9123
    @tombombadil9123 7 років тому +121

    very easy. Tolkien was motivated by love. not money or fame or pursuit of intellectual or artistic excellence. his work has a soul and reader with a soul can feel it.

    • @tomdean829
      @tomdean829 5 років тому +5

      One reason he wrote LOTR was because of the success of The Hobbit and to capitalize on that success. So money is one of the main reasons why we have LOTR.

    • @tomdean829
      @tomdean829 5 років тому +8

      If The Hobbit wasn't successful, we wouldn't have LOTR today. Tolkien's interest in language and the publication of these stories are two different things. Money has been the catalyst for many great works of art. Thinking that art requires pure motivations is just silly.

    • @pjdougherty6442
      @pjdougherty6442 5 років тому +6

      Tom Dean Perhaps we wouldn’t have Lord of the Rings, but who’s to say he wouldn’t have written them anyway if only to read them to his children? He’s written stories for his kids before. Perhaps if the Hobbit wasn’t successful, only his family would have Lord of the Rings.

    • @vaahtobileet
      @vaahtobileet 4 роки тому +5

      @FREEDOM LIGHTRIDER The sole reason he wrote LOTR was because his publisher wanted a sequel to The Hobbit rather than publish The Silmarillion. They wanted an another fairy tale for children, but while writing it, the story "revealed" itself to Tolkien as being much larger. Money was definitely a large reason why his most popular work got made. He didn't create the languages for the story, he created the story for the languages (which were created long before).

    • @reencollett6835
      @reencollett6835 4 роки тому

      Absolutely!!

  • @keyboarddancers7751
    @keyboarddancers7751 9 років тому +118

    What a thoroughly enjoyable lecture. Being a reader of Tolkien since 1974 and having also read a few very interesting and engaging critiques of his work, it was really refreshing to hear a truly expansive and focused academic appraisal of Tolkien which brought a hitherto unknown perspective to my understanding of this tremendous mythology.

  • @stvbrsn
    @stvbrsn 8 років тому +63

    "...they need a building code more than they need a White Council."
    Uber-nerd humor at its best!
    Furthermore, it's nice that Jackson and his production design crew took the fact of numerous ruins in middle earth to heart. The movies (especially the extended cuts) are replete with beautiful, evocative ruins.

    • @gustavosanabio473
      @gustavosanabio473 6 років тому +1

      I agree!!!

    • @forn8473
      @forn8473 6 років тому +8

      I feel the opposite is true. While the ruins in itself look good, it just feels like they're out of place in a wide, undiscovered world that feels new. Like how we never see actual roads that lead to those ruins, like they stood in the middle of nowhere even when they were still in use. And only sporadically we get to see them.
      In fact, this is true for the whole world in the films: every city feels out of place: great walled settlements just placed into an empty field. Just compare Minas Tirith and the description Tolkien gave of the Pelennor Fields - dotted with farmstead, barnes and byres - with the big green empty field we get to see in the film. It's like everyone lives in cities that don't even have a food supply. Tolkien managed to create a world that felt old, lowly populated and yet very organic, Jackson did almost the opposite imo.

    • @marks.6480
      @marks.6480 5 років тому +1

      until you notice that all the ruins look similar. they kept using the same faux columns and stones throughout the trilogy.

    • @fleurafricaine5740
      @fleurafricaine5740 2 роки тому

      I thought the joke was going to go another way:
      “… their infrastructure engineering was atrocious.”

    • @patrickholt2270
      @patrickholt2270 Рік тому +1

      There's a problem which Jackson and crew fell foul of, and which film and TV still haven't resolved, which is how to fill the world with the normal rural life of a medieval and/or iron age past when their only available locations are parkland and wilderness. So Jackson's ruins, or the castles in Vikings and The Last Kingdom, as always surrounded by empty waste devoid of the peasant farming and coppicing and abundant wildlife and domesticated livestock which were there in those periods and were all around Minas Tirith, Edoras and Pelargir. Until they start backfilling the human settlement in CGI or whatever, it will always be unimmersive.

  • @ouatedephoque2961
    @ouatedephoque2961 2 роки тому +14

    I must of read Lord of the Rings 20 times. Silmarillion even more than that. And the funny thing is, my English teacher in 9th grade suggested that I might like The Hobbit it from a poem I wrote at the time for her class. And from there I was hooked.
    She was a most amazing teacher. When we were studying Macbeth, she read each line and explained them in their context and then she did the whole play in a one woman show. Just brilliant of her the way she embodied each character and changed her voice and mannerisms accordingly.

    • @zenden6564
      @zenden6564 Рік тому +1

      Wow, some teacher ...😮

    • @maryhaddock9145
      @maryhaddock9145 11 місяців тому

      I don't think you did. Have, not of. Strewth!

  • @AshThunor
    @AshThunor 7 років тому +64

    His analysis is spot on, but his understanding of the true theme is impeccable: nostalgia.

  • @notme3154
    @notme3154 6 років тому +33

    Table of Content
    >Learning by Knowledge Construction (LKC) [12:19]
    >>Zusammenhang of pseudo references/broken reference[25:14]
    >Philologists are the tribologists of text [42:22]
    >>Transcendental references[46:23]
    >Summary[53:04]

  • @craigmanning2439
    @craigmanning2439 3 роки тому +17

    My sister, gave me the Hobbit when I was 7. When I was 8 I picked up LOTR. Took me a year to read. Then I read it every year until I had children. 17 times.

  • @FelixIakhos
    @FelixIakhos 9 років тому +173

    I like his reading but he tries to entertain a little too much for me. Still, he did really well and made it a cohesive reading. Also it's kind of funny that he works at Mellon university. (In middle-Earth Mellon is elvish for friend)

    • @greycricketsong
      @greycricketsong 9 років тому +40

      I'm willing to bet that every person who watches this already knows mellon means friend in elvish :p

    • @FelixIakhos
      @FelixIakhos 9 років тому +5

      I hope so ;)

    • @user-jf5sn5sy4u
      @user-jf5sn5sy4u 8 років тому +9

      +Dovahkiin Dragonborn (theblackpixel1) Mellon (Μέλλον) also means "future" in Greek.

    • @sam___seed4761
      @sam___seed4761 7 років тому

      The lead skater in Alduin on ice andthenI

    • @impastabowl2328
      @impastabowl2328 4 роки тому

      Wait this dude or Tolkien

  • @suba7320
    @suba7320 Рік тому +4

    Never had a lecture make me tear up before. That ending. Wow.

  • @Richard_Ashton
    @Richard_Ashton 9 років тому +25

    Wonderful. Enjoyed everything even tearing up at Sam's last words.

  • @alexanderdean8682
    @alexanderdean8682 4 роки тому +30

    I'm not a philologist, but even I know that Tolkien was the person that put the words precisely where they should be because languages were his speciality, and he was truly thorough when creating his world and its history - peoples, languages etc. This is what happens to people when no one reads them fairy tales of different peoples and cultures when they are kids, and they don't read books of different writers from different nations and historical backgrounds - they get narrow-minded and don't understand the usage of old fashioned words, archaisms and characteristics of protagonists and antagonists of the stories. It was nice listening to this lecture, but I don't need explanations of Tolkien's motivation or anything like that to enjoy his works... Nostalgia - yeah, may not be popular, but anyone who has felt deep nostalgia and longing for what has been and is gone, for the passing of time and seeing birds leave to go to the south in autumn - anyone will understand the feeling Tolkien has weaved into his writings...

  • @DelireWeb
    @DelireWeb 3 роки тому +10

    I was studying computer science in University of Montréal (& Operational Research), filled with D&D culture around the 1990's. That's when I've discovered Tolkien's work and learned English by reading all his books (some more than once i.e. the Silmarillion), along a dictionary.

  • @GreatGreebo
    @GreatGreebo 2 роки тому +8

    Wow…I clicked in here wanting to hear a few LOTR names being pronounced; I was IMMEDIATELY sucked in and learned so much more! This is brilliant.

  • @dabbler2071
    @dabbler2071 8 місяців тому +1

    The prof’s conclusion is why I majored in English in early 60’s. I’ve had to justify my degree for years saying Lit used to be taught without a party line. I’m glad such professors as he continue to explain the way of the human heart.

  • @yvonnemason9137
    @yvonnemason9137 5 років тому +20

    Bravo! An utterly erudite and eloquently delivered lecture. What a pleasure to listen to!

  • @bradminson8291
    @bradminson8291 3 роки тому +4

    Every lecture I’ve ever heard of Dr. Drout’s has been amazing

  • @christophedmarchal76
    @christophedmarchal76 3 роки тому +12

    That was incredible, beautiful even. The last ten minutes of the lecture really put a frame around what I've never been able to articulate, on why the books have impacted me and so much of my decision making, outlook, and the beauty of sadness, these past 40 years. From hiking the AT to see my own mountains and elves (naming myself ïrandir on the trail), to being an Old English Literature major and tasting what that was about. Good morning indeed! 🙂 Going to pick up his book on ruins.

  • @tasosdellios9228
    @tasosdellios9228 7 років тому +135

    This guy is brilliant. How can it be not to hear laughs with his jokes, i found them hilarious.

    • @trosclair434genus4
      @trosclair434genus4 6 років тому +5

      My boss answered that question. He said "it's smart people humor" i said, "that's what i said, well, i said it in the opposite as, you're stupid but basically the same" he got a kick out of it but im too passionate to say i was wholly kidding. . .

    • @berendharmsen
      @berendharmsen 4 роки тому +20

      Aweful comedic timing. That's the whole problem. The jokes are fine, but he totally fails to build momentum and rapport with the audience. The fact that he is basically reading it from paper doomed his chances of the jokes having a successful delivery.

    • @joshuaorourke1976
      @joshuaorourke1976 2 роки тому +2

      The jokes aren’t funny.

    • @velenvskaelhas
      @velenvskaelhas 2 роки тому

      3:30 Is my personnel favourite.

  • @BiffaTW
    @BiffaTW 10 років тому +42

    A very very keen insight, surprisingly brilliant lecture.

  • @gabriellebaalke6704
    @gabriellebaalke6704 5 років тому +8

    I came into contact with Michael Drout by way of an Old English course I took through Signum University. He's fanastic and I love his humour.

  • @jackuber7358
    @jackuber7358 3 роки тому +12

    A little geeky, but fun, and very informative. I had never considered that errors or inconsistencies within the text might be indicative of translational or fragmentary issues with the "original" Quenya autographs, nonexistent by the time of the recording of the Lord of the Rings.

  • @donaldcreech7782
    @donaldcreech7782 5 років тому +163

    Aww no one is laughing at his jokes, but they are hilarious to me!

    • @githerax5303
      @githerax5303 3 роки тому +31

      They laughed, but the mic didn't pick it up.

    • @RollingCalf
      @RollingCalf 2 роки тому +21

      Some things just aren't laugh out loud funny.
      His jokes made me smile and chuckle softly

    • @theConquerersMama
      @theConquerersMama 2 роки тому

      Me too.

  • @cerevor
    @cerevor 10 років тому +4

    He has a good form of analysis. Very different, nearer to actual experience than most academic discourse (it's mostly just frustrating and you have to sort it out to make it more normal, so that's actually very advanced).

  • @mormonhippie
    @mormonhippie 9 років тому +4

    That was incredible. I teared up toward the end.

  • @Ardepark
    @Ardepark 9 років тому +86

    (1) This is an edifying and engrossing lecture. It validates something I have always appreciated but could not articulate about Tolkien's writing. Fabulous job.
    (2) This guy should NEVER tell another joke EVER again.

    • @AxelQC
      @AxelQC 5 років тому +16

      He's a professor. That's how they lighten things up. If they were really funny, they'd be doing stand up, not teaching Chaucer.

    • @theConquerersMama
      @theConquerersMama 2 роки тому +2

      I really enjoyed his humor.

  • @pkkkk91
    @pkkkk91 5 років тому +2

    amazing lecture sir....the last bit was emotional

  • @andrewcrowder4958
    @andrewcrowder4958 2 роки тому

    Really brilliant. A couple new concepts, a fresh application of an existing one, and interwoven with many other fields and disciplines.

  • @suburbanbanshee
    @suburbanbanshee 2 роки тому +8

    Drout is a great scholar as well as a darned good Tolkien scholar, and I've never read anything by him that I didn't profit by. (Even when I disagree with him, I learn something.)
    That said, Tolkien is something you read primarily to be entertained. The proper way to approach him is, "Tell me a story, please." All of the great authors and epic poets are master storytellers first and foremost, and you won't get anything else out of them if you think you're too good to get absorbed into a story.
    I first read LOTR when I was in elementary school, and I get something new out of it every time I read. But mostly, I get drawn farther into the story.
    If you've never read Tolkien before, please let go of your preconceptions and just read. Allow yourself to be surprised, and to wonder what the heck is going on. Don't be too awed to enjoy, and don't be put off by the oddities of the book. Just take it in, and make a judgment later.
    Don't freak out because The Hobbit is so different from Lord of the Rings, but do read The Hobbit first, if you can.
    And if thick books intimidate you, just listen to an unabridged audiobook in chunks.

    • @suburbanbanshee
      @suburbanbanshee 2 роки тому

      And you're allowed not to like the book. Tolkien was the first to point out that people tended to love or be totally bored and disgusted by his books, with no inbetween.
      Sadly, one of the Inklings who was a novelist (not Lewis, and not anybody anyone's heard of) felt the latter way, and not politely, and not in a "just let me disappear into the other room for a bit" way. He tried to get Tolkien to stop writing, and pretty much broke the Inklings apart.
      There are writers I can't stand, and that other people love; and there are writers that I used to dislike and now love. Books can be slippery like that.

    • @PleaseNThankYou
      @PleaseNThankYou 2 роки тому

      So where is this gentleman in all the fray of Amazon's nonsense?

    • @Vexarax
      @Vexarax 2 роки тому +1

      Regarding the audiobooks Andy Serkis (Gollum) reads the new unabridged versions of The Hobbit and Lord of the Rings - those versions are absolutely recommended, they're incredible. Next, Martin Shaw's audio version of Silmarillion is freaking brilliant if you want something heavier :D

    • @Vexarax
      @Vexarax 2 роки тому +2

      @@PleaseNThankYou - did you hear what happened with Corey Olson and dwarf women's beards? He's an actual genuine Tolkien Scholar, and super knowledgeable, but in his recent IGN interview he said "dwarf women don't have beards, Tolkien _never_ said that, that's a fan theory because Aragorn made a joke about it in the two towers movie and everyone loved it" - but Tolkien strongly implied they have beards in the appendices when he said "dwarf men and women are so alike in voice and appearance that other people cannot tell them apart" and in Histories he said "the Naugrim (dwarves) have beards from the beginning of their lives, both men and women alike, and a shaven dwarf will die of shame" .. Olson then made a tweet and a further podcast episode reiterating that Tolkien never said dwarf women have beards. It's so freaking strange!!

    • @PleaseNThankYou
      @PleaseNThankYou 2 роки тому +1

      @@Vexarax Yes! and I watched those. Late 2020 I started watching Olsen videos(Signum U.) and started noticing something that I did not like about his canon theory… that it was THEORY. He is very knowledgeable but since there are some empty spaces in the lore, Olsen tends to use conjecture often, and many times without clarifying such. Those who are just learning all the basic points will take his scholarship as gospel and be then tainted. When I was young I acquired the Lost Tales One and had tried very hard to grasp it’s odd literary style (I’d already read The Hobbit and LR back to back in 8th grade and so I had a bit of it down already. I didn’t get the Silmarillion for almost 10 years more and knew it’s place in the line up… I was SO confused. So, all that to say this- Olsen may have years of study and paperwork to prove it but he is still prone to inserting his own narrative to fill gaps. I feel this is disingenuous of him as he has full access to all writing (Nature of M.E. excluded as it’s new, so older speculation will receive a pass as long as it’s not a repeated offense). But you know that Olsen just got his Signum Univ. accredited , right!! I wonder if there are any sponsors that he is “ Beholden too”? Being a university in the 2020’s seems to carry the burden of Wokedom as a prerequisite for validation. Hmm🤔

  • @EastLancsJohn
    @EastLancsJohn 10 років тому +4

    A brilliant lecture, thanks for uploading

  • @thecosmicaesthetic
    @thecosmicaesthetic 6 років тому +4

    I love Drout. Hes brilliant. I listened to his lectures from the Modern Scholar.

  • @mcnichollsdj
    @mcnichollsdj 2 роки тому +1

    "Well, I'm back." - You got me already.
    And then I watched it, and I have to admit... I welled up a little, here and there. Glad you came back, glad you spoke, glad I heard.

  • @martinmayhew145
    @martinmayhew145 4 роки тому +4

    I for one have read Lord of the Rings at least 3 times. Once when I was 10, 15 and 25. Picking up new things about it every time I read it.

  • @musikSkool
    @musikSkool Рік тому +2

    He wrote it like a professor lives his life. When students ask questions, the professor tells some of what they need to know, but if he told them all he knew, they would be his age by the end of the telling.

  • @philjamieson5572
    @philjamieson5572 4 роки тому +10

    I think Tolkien was one of Britain's greatest writers. I wish he'd written many more Middle Earth stories.

    • @silverdragon710
      @silverdragon710 4 роки тому +8

      I wish he'd FINISHED more Middle-Earth stories.

    • @user-dc4xw8zp4t
      @user-dc4xw8zp4t 2 роки тому +3

      @@silverdragon710 Part of my joy of reading Tolkien is that he leaves plenty of room for the imagination.

  • @Teaparamiporfavor
    @Teaparamiporfavor 10 років тому +1

    Great lecture. Was nice to listen to while folding laundry. It gave me chills and I loved the ruins subliminal messaging he described.

  • @garychristensen8025
    @garychristensen8025 6 років тому +1

    Sebsantional - I could not stop watching -vert enlightening. Thanks for uploading.

  • @westbethkid
    @westbethkid 6 років тому

    Fantastic lecture. Illuminating for any Tolkien fan who wants to know why the books are so powerful.

  • @izzyhale8350
    @izzyhale8350 Місяць тому

    This was one of the best talks I’ve ever heard.

  • @archieburdick
    @archieburdick 6 років тому +10

    I picked this book up today to hopefully get better at English because reading apparently helps with that, so im gonna go start reading this now, wish me luck :)

  • @sauron7049
    @sauron7049 7 років тому +4

    Outstanding lecture.

  • @sitting_nut
    @sitting_nut 9 років тому +2

    this is a great lecture. thanks.

  • @AWildBard
    @AWildBard 3 роки тому +1

    Remarkably beautiful ending invoking nostalgia.

  • @waxenapple1195
    @waxenapple1195 Рік тому

    This is so amazingly insightful!

  • @hamock1
    @hamock1 3 роки тому +2

    Interesting lecture even if you're not that interested in how to read JRR Tolkien. But the brilliant speaker makes it interesting and relevant. And he preserved his youthful humour which is super likable.

  • @HenryOtero
    @HenryOtero 10 років тому +1

    Very interesting. Fantastic work!

  • @probro9898
    @probro9898 5 років тому +13

    The Cats of Queen Beruthiel were explained in Unfinished Tales. Queen Beruthiel was the wife of Tarannon Falastur, 12th king of Gondor. She was a witch, who trained her ten cats to act as her spies. Her husband eventually banished her from his kingdom and she was last seen in a boat, sailing south, accompanied only by her cats.

    • @Inkling777
      @Inkling777 3 роки тому +1

      In short, Beruthiel was the prototypical cat lady.

    • @ccahill2322
      @ccahill2322 2 роки тому

      probro9898, she was, one might say, a "migrant" in reverse.

  • @victorfield4607
    @victorfield4607 2 роки тому +4

    The late (and much-missed) Ursula Le Guin wrote a couple of really, really useful and perceptive essays on Tolkien - please if you enjoy this kind of thing, look them up. Also can recommend a book by Randall Helms called "Master of Middle-Earth" published BEFORE the Silmarillion, amazingly perceptive and useful if you want to understand more about Tolkien's work.

    • @mikearchibald744
      @mikearchibald744 Рік тому

      I can't find them, I assume you mean the lady that wrote Tales from Earthsea?

  • @jonandjenplatt
    @jonandjenplatt 6 років тому

    I watched this just after the 80th anniversary of the publishing of "The Hobbit". Make sure you have the hour to commit to this program. It is very insightful and added a new level of my understanding of the Sage of Middle Earth.

  • @vince147
    @vince147 2 роки тому +1

    Great speaker. I laughed many times. Very enjoyable to listen to. Thank you.

  • @Sourdust-eo4oz
    @Sourdust-eo4oz Місяць тому

    This is wonderful. I'm going to read it again right away !

  • @kevinkelley3906
    @kevinkelley3906 Рік тому

    My Daughter went to Keuka College and they have a yearly event. The Library has a book sale and I bought all the books for super cheap. One of the best purchases ever.

  • @Rejoice1631
    @Rejoice1631 2 роки тому

    Very well done, good sir... Admirable, indeed.!.!.!.!

  • @sanjivjhangiani3243
    @sanjivjhangiani3243 2 роки тому +1

    I have been told that when "The West Side Story" film was released in India, the audience jeered because there is singing in it! That is, in their experience, singing in a film meant it was low end, like a Bollywood movie, for example. Interesting that some critics assumed that the high language, "messiness," etc., is a "flaw in LOTR, whereas it is a subtle form of being a very different kind of text.

  • @gcvrsa
    @gcvrsa 2 роки тому +1

    I don't really know why I'm watching this on a Sunday morning in 2022, except that I'm a Tolkien fan who happens to have been at Carnegie-Mellon at roughly the same time as the lecturer, and his anecdotes of life at Carnegie-Mellon in those days amuse me.
    Only, I can't actually relate that much to his trials concerning course registration, since I was in Department of Drama, where one did not really have choices over courses, so much as one had a full slate of required courses. I think I maybe had one elective slot per semester, and otherwise, classes from 0800 to 2300 Monday through Friday, with a one hour break for lunch and a 2.5 hour break for dinner (from 1700 to 1930), then back to class from 1930 to 2300, plus 3.5 hours of class on Saturday.
    Also, there was no "Dietrich College" in the late 1980s-early 1990s. Strange that I don't remember Jim Kempf, even though we were apparently in the same program, and there weren't very many people in that program. I think he was a year behind me.

  • @KipIngram
    @KipIngram Рік тому

    The other thing that Tolkien did an extraordinary job of was "delivering" his love of nature right onto those pages. As I read the descriptions of the settings and so on, first of all I felt like I was "there," but even more I felt that it was BEAUTIFUL and wholesome and very much a place that it would be pleasant to live in - a place that I could "feel love for." That's good writing.

  • @anthonyhulse1248
    @anthonyhulse1248 Рік тому

    I first read the Hobbit and LOTR when I was 12, and then read them every 2 years since then. I read them to my kids too. These books are part of my life.

  • @ImNotJoshPotter
    @ImNotJoshPotter 5 років тому +48

    Those complaining about his humor have clearly never taken an engineering class. I find barely social humor charming.

    • @susan137
      @susan137 4 роки тому +2

      I doubt it is the taking of an engineering class that molds a person's humour type. Most likely the humour type of people who end up taking engineering classes is already a set type of engineering mind humour, that in fact is likely how it occurs that these people are even interested in engineering classes and able to excel in such classes.

  • @markokelly2494
    @markokelly2494 2 роки тому

    I did not expect this to be anything like this good.

  • @voteZDLR
    @voteZDLR 6 років тому +7

    I used to be scared to read Lord of the Rings but ever since then I read all of the published Game of Thrones books (well, the main ones not the novellas) and I am hoping that it will be my next successful read-through. Starting with the Hobbit. :)

    • @sandy_the_hippy
      @sandy_the_hippy 4 роки тому +1

      Never fear books, or assume they are "above your level", it's simply by reading them, even if it takes many readings, that you consume them and make them part of you- much like food, nourishment for the brain/soul

  • @PhilWithCoffee
    @PhilWithCoffee 8 років тому +22

    Great lecture, it really makes you appreciate the difference between good writers (George Martin, Frank Herbert) and great Writers (Tolkien, C.S. Lewis).

    • @CoolAsianGuy
      @CoolAsianGuy 5 років тому +5

      martin is not even a good writer

    • @zingzangspillip1
      @zingzangspillip1 4 роки тому +5

      He is pretty good. He just doesn't know when to stop.

    • @ccahill2322
      @ccahill2322 2 роки тому +1

      @@CoolAsianGuy , "martin is not "even" a good writer shows you are not an "expert" in English.

    • @CoolAsianGuy
      @CoolAsianGuy 2 роки тому +1

      @@ccahill2322 Well alright. he's good. but that's it. his strength is in making plots. not in prose.

    • @publiopaolacci495
      @publiopaolacci495 2 роки тому +1

      @@CoolAsianGuy Honestly i think that making a good story is more important than prose, way more

  • @danjackson4149
    @danjackson4149 3 роки тому +3

    when is the book The Tower And The Ruin to be published ?
    also, i love the 'standing in two moments at once' portion at 58:26
    i always thought it would be great for the custodians of stonehenge to replace the missing uprights with solid glass replicas, so that you could see both the present and how it was in the past, but this etched glass panel is the next best thing to it.

  • @jrpipik
    @jrpipik 9 років тому

    Nicely done.

  • @chrisblanc663
    @chrisblanc663 2 роки тому +1

    I can’t believe when talking about pseudo references, in literature, he didn’t mention Don Quixote.
    That aside this, was a great presentation!

  • @44holmez
    @44holmez 3 роки тому +1

    He is hillarious. Thanks for this.

  • @jcpt928
    @jcpt928 2 роки тому

    This was brilliant.

  • @stockman214
    @stockman214 4 роки тому

    That was fantastic.

  • @bigpapisports5051
    @bigpapisports5051 4 роки тому

    this is so great

  • @dgmsstuff
    @dgmsstuff 7 років тому +7

    this guy's lectures are fuckin' great

  • @Sirchud68
    @Sirchud68 10 років тому +3

    Drout is the MAN!!!

  • @ralphschraven339
    @ralphschraven339 3 роки тому +2

    I was profoundly puzzled by the title of the lecture. Who needs a tutorial on how to "read" Tolkien? Surely the books are fairly straightforward - in their essence, that is. But he truly strikes us all with wildly interesting analysis on how Tolkien has gone beyond just "Here's an epic battle in Chapter 1, followed by this world's ontology in Chapter 2." Marvelous lecture, it's always a delight to draw connections that were hidden in plain sight!

    • @theConquerersMama
      @theConquerersMama 2 роки тому

      I think he gave it that title as to not scare people away and let them know it wasn't going to be a dry or intimidating lecture where you had to already be a medieval or Tolkien scholar. Since this is a visiting alumni lecture from a professor in a field that many people find daunting or not always applicable or relatable. I think he didn't want the title to come off too academic.

  • @Yesica1993
    @Yesica1993 10 років тому +1

    Very enjoyable!

  • @lancewalker2595
    @lancewalker2595 7 років тому

    This is awesome.

  • @entropybentwhistle
    @entropybentwhistle Рік тому

    Solid lesson. It is from Carnegie Friend university, after all.

  • @lesath7883
    @lesath7883 9 місяців тому

    Thank you.

  • @markowen3690
    @markowen3690 2 роки тому

    Thank you!

  • @Mr5ampa5
    @Mr5ampa5 5 років тому

    Excellent.

  • @mpccengineer
    @mpccengineer 2 роки тому +1

    My parents read me the Hobbit as a young child, and at age 10 I was deemed old enough to read my father's leather-bound copy of The Lord of the Rings. It was a massive red tome with all of the books in one, as Tolkien intended. The experience meant so much to me, that I have repeated it at least once every year for the past 38 years. It has literally guided my life and formed my character in endless ways. I learn something new about the story and about myself each time I reread it. I transferred my love in the same way to my 5 children, and I expect them to do the same.

    • @aleksander3978
      @aleksander3978 2 роки тому

      You are a good Father/Mother and i am glad that there are still parents who read books to their children.

    • @mpccengineer
      @mpccengineer 2 роки тому

      @@aleksander3978 Many thanks. It continues into the next generation with my oldest daughter and her children.

  • @icollectbadgers
    @icollectbadgers 7 місяців тому

    "Himself" doesn't alliterate with "Hador and Hurin", it actually alliterates with "assembled". The Old Norse verse, which I assume is what Tolkien was referencing with that poem, only ever alliterated on the stressed syllables, not the unstressed ones. The stressed syllables in both "himself" and "assembled" are the second ones, which both start with an S-sound.
    This actually makes the poem work better: Hador and Hurin are connected through alliteration, while Hurin and Turin are connected through rhyme, but the line with Beren breaks the pattern and starts a new alliterating couplet. This reinforces the feeling that "Beren himself" is somehow set apart from and stands above the three people mentioned before him.
    The poem from the lecture I'm referring to, for reference:
    elf-friends of old,
    Hador
    and Hurin,
    and Turin,
    and Beren himself
    were assembled

  • @donmelbouchard
    @donmelbouchard 9 років тому +1

    Excellent presentation, which I will share with my Adolescent Literature students as we discuss The Hobbit. Thank you for sharing.

  • @mikealexander1935
    @mikealexander1935 3 роки тому +1

    It's the richness of his world, which is ours, and so operates according to all the natural laws we already know. So we immediately feel comfortable. Finally there are the hobbits who are quaint and rustic, but relatable people who unlike the other races are modern people (or at least modern period form the perspective of Tolkien's youth and so familiar.
    This bases the reader in a mundane reality in the midst of a magical world, from whence they venture. For example, when the hobbits are leaving the shire, they pass near the village of Stock, where Pippin (i think) wants to to stop because they have a pub with really good beer. Frodo rules against it figuring Pippin in a pub means a long delay. It is just a homey little detail, one of the last bits of normality before nothing will be normal.
    The solidity makes it so easy for the reader to enter the reasonably familiar world of the Shire, and then learn with the hobbits about the magical world outside of the Shire, which allows the reader to experience the magical world as if they were there.

  • @maxroma2799
    @maxroma2799 4 роки тому +6

    Read The Lost Road (vol IV of the History of Middle Earth) and you will see that all these features are there explicit. It’s a strange book, perhaps the strangest in Tolkien’s morphology, but considering it was written just before he started writing the lord of the rings it contains his vision, his Weltanschauung that led him to write eventually his masterpiece.

    • @moritzbenner4190
      @moritzbenner4190 2 роки тому

      Is weltanschauung really a German word used in English? Didn't knew that.

    • @maxroma2799
      @maxroma2799 2 роки тому

      @@moritzbenner4190 in German means something similar to “worldview”. It’s used in other languages because there is not an exact translation in English, so you keep it like that.

    • @moritzbenner4190
      @moritzbenner4190 2 роки тому

      @@maxroma2799 Yeah German is my native language, but I never had heard it in English...

  • @edraith
    @edraith Рік тому

    wonderful

  • @debbieramsey-hanks3757
    @debbieramsey-hanks3757 4 місяці тому

    Thank you

  • @iwannabeyourdog4195
    @iwannabeyourdog4195 2 роки тому

    1. Learn the alphabet
    2. Learn how to read
    3. Read and try to remember what is being said in the text
    4. Success

  • @BanazirGalpsi1968
    @BanazirGalpsi1968 2 роки тому

    Favorite psudo broken reference: original unedited volume of princess bride by s. Morganstern.

  • @Fresh562
    @Fresh562 10 років тому +1

    Great! I should learn more literature phenomenology

  • @number1enemyoftheuseless985
    @number1enemyoftheuseless985 2 роки тому

    I read LOTR for the first time when I was 9yo I saw it on the shelf at the book store.

  • @ryansyler8847
    @ryansyler8847 Рік тому

    What a wonderfully enriching lecture from one of the foremost scholars on Tolkien. My only complaint and point of disagreement is when Drout remarks that Tolkien is not literature but pop culture. I agree that he's a pop culture phenomenon but I think that hi work is nevertheless literature. In fact, Drout's entire presentation demonstrates ever more deeply that Tolkien is and should be studied as literature.

    • @debbier7376
      @debbier7376 9 місяців тому

      I think Prof. Drout was being ironic when he referred to LOTR as "pop culture."

  • @polina_oncer9105
    @polina_oncer9105 4 роки тому

    Marvellous!

  • @Radimkiller
    @Radimkiller 7 років тому

    Very nice.

  • @adeepseadiverindoubt
    @adeepseadiverindoubt 7 років тому +1

    I want to take this class

  • @desireeschielke763
    @desireeschielke763 2 роки тому +2

    Loved the lecture, loved the jokes more lol excellent hour spent

  • @vaughancapstick9961
    @vaughancapstick9961 2 роки тому

    This is very interesting 👌

  • @c0gsinc0gs
    @c0gsinc0gs 10 років тому +135

    How to read Tolkien; start at the beginning...

    • @ZyPhReX
      @ZyPhReX 7 років тому +7

      How to get attention; be obvious...

    • @c0gsinc0gs
      @c0gsinc0gs 7 років тому +2

      obviously

    • @reptomicus
      @reptomicus 7 років тому +21

      Where the actual beginning is with Tolkien is a trick unto itself.

    • @highkingfingolfin9773
      @highkingfingolfin9773 7 років тому +11

      "The Wheel of Time turns, and Ages come and pass, leaving memories that become legend. Legend fades to myth, and even myth is long forgotten when the Age that gave it birth comes again. In one Age, called the Third Age by some, an Age yet to come, an Age long past, a wind rose in the Mountains of Mist. The wind was not the beginning. There are neither beginnings nor endings to the turning of the Wheel of Time. But it was a beginning."
      Wait,
      wrong book

    • @ronaldpoulton4320
      @ronaldpoulton4320 6 років тому

      c0gsinc0gs [

  • @ArthurCowboy06
    @ArthurCowboy06 2 роки тому +1

    I finished lord of the rings today yay