As a sort of group answer (I've been mostly absent from forums the past two days)
Larry Send a noteboard - 31/01/2012 10:45:55 PM
Clearly my Tolkien fanboy-hood can still use some work.
I'd like to quote what someone said over at her blog that I think captures my own feelings on this:
I think “epic work of creative genius” and “full of racism, sexism, and classism” aren’t necessarily mutually exclusive. I mean, I love Dickens, but he was writing a hundred years before Tolkien and pretty much everything said in defense and criticism of Tolkien applies to Dickens as well.
That said, I read The Hobbit as a kid, but I’ve never actually made it through Lord of the Rings. For an epic fantasy adventure, LotR is really pretty damned boring most of the time.
The problem with the “man of his time” defense it that it assumes it’s good enough to be just a typical specimen of your era. Tolkien was certainly no worse than most of his contemporaries, and he was probably a relatively decent man with no active malice towards other races, but neither did he make any effort to be better than his contemporaries. It’s like people today who think it’s good enough just to agree that the KKK is awful and rape is bad. I don’t think Tolkien particularly deserves to be hated on, but he certainly deserves no accolades for progressiveness or enlightenment.
And as is so often the case, the fanboys could enjoy their Tolkien sans defensiveness if they were just willing to admit that what they love is problematic. You can enjoy something that’s great and flawed and acknowledge the flaws. Like Dickens.
That said, I read The Hobbit as a kid, but I’ve never actually made it through Lord of the Rings. For an epic fantasy adventure, LotR is really pretty damned boring most of the time.
The problem with the “man of his time” defense it that it assumes it’s good enough to be just a typical specimen of your era. Tolkien was certainly no worse than most of his contemporaries, and he was probably a relatively decent man with no active malice towards other races, but neither did he make any effort to be better than his contemporaries. It’s like people today who think it’s good enough just to agree that the KKK is awful and rape is bad. I don’t think Tolkien particularly deserves to be hated on, but he certainly deserves no accolades for progressiveness or enlightenment.
And as is so often the case, the fanboys could enjoy their Tolkien sans defensiveness if they were just willing to admit that what they love is problematic. You can enjoy something that’s great and flawed and acknowledge the flaws. Like Dickens.
It's easy to take offense when your world-views are challenged. Very few are proud of their prejudices, but almost as few don't want to admit that they have any. The difference between having social/ethnic prejudices and racism, however, is that one can be held without that other person being at serious danger of her life being threatened or loss of status occurring while the other has a whole social system that subconsciously reinforces that view.
I can be quite prejudicial toward Yankees and the English, but due to being relegated to "other" categorization (Southerner, Irish/Cherokee), it will hardly affect status. But tell a Mexican joke or make a comment about women and/or gays/lesbians and there's a bit more weight behind it, because of how those views have been institutionalized at various times in American (and by extension, Western) history. That's my response to the issue of whether or not the blogger in question can be "racist" or not. She may hold prejudicial views (who doesn't), but they are hardly "racist" if they aren't institutionalized to some extent.
As for Tolkien, are his views any different than how many of us (or our family/friends) are when it comes to someone of a different ethnic/social background? That's the real issue, I suspect and I would answer "Not really." I have my own race/class-based prejudices to work on, so why is there such defensiveness when it comes to the fact that an author made some comments and wrote some characters that current readers may find to be objectionable? Best to work on removing those specks from our eyes, I think.
Illusions fall like the husk of a fruit, one after another, and the fruit is experience. - Narrator, Sylvie
Je suis méchant.
Je suis méchant.
The racist elements in Tolkien's writing
29/01/2012 01:31:02 PM
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She has some points, of course.
29/01/2012 02:25:32 PM
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Quite a few points
29/01/2012 02:40:45 PM
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I don't find the tone blunt; I find it leading, patronizing and often wrong or inferring too much.
30/01/2012 01:43:27 AM
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Agreed - reading it, I struggled to find any redeeming qualities
30/01/2012 07:32:58 PM
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Agreed, in general. The tremendous bad faith and sophistry turn me off, though.
29/01/2012 09:31:04 PM
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Mostly agreed with the article, but thought she undermined herself with her own racism.
29/01/2012 02:50:11 PM
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Just read your Twitter convo... nice try, but looks like wasted effort. *NM*
29/01/2012 10:37:08 PM
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Well, I'll be honest.
29/01/2012 10:34:46 PM
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Let me try to summarize some of her points with the invective filtered out, then.
29/01/2012 10:48:24 PM
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Thank you.
29/01/2012 11:10:13 PM
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What the hell, might as well go and play devil's advocate, right?
30/01/2012 04:50:30 PM
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I expected that.
30/01/2012 05:39:59 PM
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Of course you did. I'm predictable that way.
30/01/2012 10:28:10 PM
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Re: Of course you did. I'm predictable that way.
31/01/2012 12:39:46 AM
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Re: Of course you did. I'm predictable that way.
31/01/2012 08:38:46 PM
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I <3 you, but there are several very key things we are not going to agree on.
31/01/2012 10:02:22 PM
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Hmm?
31/01/2012 10:10:22 PM
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Yeah. I got to reading Encyclopedia of Arda just now, and it told me the same thing.
31/01/2012 10:35:54 PM
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As a sort of group answer (I've been mostly absent from forums the past two days)
31/01/2012 10:45:55 PM
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I don't mind if you tell me I'm out of line here, but
31/01/2012 11:55:04 PM
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I'm rarely ever offended
01/02/2012 01:54:58 AM
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She was referring specifically to the Twitter "conversation" I had with the blogger.
01/02/2012 09:05:28 AM
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Yes.
01/02/2012 10:47:22 AM
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It makes me wonder what she thinks is happening in Zimbabwe, for example.
01/02/2012 11:13:11 AM
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I've been thinking about that.
01/02/2012 11:29:18 AM
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That blog post was mostly good, but the exception is a rather large one.
01/02/2012 08:35:57 PM
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What's a neckbeard? And why am I supposed to care? *NM*
30/01/2012 01:29:07 AM
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neckbeards are when the person (either intentionally or through misfortunate genetics)...
30/01/2012 03:21:09 AM
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acrackedmoon is a racist, sexist bore. And I don't even like Tolkien. *NM*
30/01/2012 01:14:17 PM
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