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10-04-2005, 10:21 AM | #1 |
Sapling
Join Date: Oct 2005
Posts: 2
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LOTR & Spirituality
I was wondering if anyone could help me. I am doing some reasearch on LOTR for my 3rd yr dissertation and I would love people's input. If you could take a moment to answer the following question:
Has LOTR has any deep impact on your spiritual journey and if so in what way? (Either films or books but please state which or both) If you don't feel comfortable posting here, please send me a message or email. By the way, this is any kind of spirituality, you don't have to be of a particular religion or belief but if you follow a particualr religion, please let me know if you answer! Thank you very much -Emily |
10-04-2005, 10:52 AM | #2 |
Queen of Nargothrond
Administrator Join Date: Feb 2001
Location: Akron, Ohio - USA
Posts: 7,121
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Hello Lil_Roo and welcome to Entmoot.
I am moving your thread to the Lord of the Rings forum, and you will find that we already have a numerous amount of spiritual threads in the General Messages forum. Please feel free to participate in any one of them. Again, welcome and enjoy your stay.
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"Whither go you?" she said. "North away." he said: "to the swords, and the siege, and the walls of defence - that yet for a while in Beleriand rivers may run clean, leaves spring, and birds build their nests, ere Night comes." AboutNewJersey.com - New Jersey Travel and Tourism Guide |
10-04-2005, 11:14 AM | #3 |
Advocatus Diaboli
Join Date: Dec 2001
Location: Reality
Posts: 3,767
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welcome! good question... i'm not spiritual, but since lotr is something i read at a very young age (my first "adult" book), it certainly had an effect on my outlook on life... will try to add some detailed thoughts later
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Your reality, sir, is lies and balderdash and I'm delighted to say that I have no grasp of it whatsoever. |
10-04-2005, 11:43 AM | #4 |
An enigma in a conundrum
Join Date: Oct 1999
Posts: 6,476
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Vizzini: "HE DIDN'T FALL?! INCONCEIVABLE!!" Inigo: "You keep using that word. I do not think it means what you think it means." |
10-04-2005, 12:18 PM | #5 |
Elf Lord
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: In me taters
Posts: 3,288
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I'm not religious, but I would say that LOTR hooked into a spiritual aspect of how I relate to the natural world. Like BJ, I was probably at a particularly susceptible age, but LOTR embeds respect for nature in a way that I have not seen elsewhere.
Specifically, good things in LOTR are the ones which respect and live in harmony with their environment while evil things are the ones which don't. |
10-04-2005, 04:06 PM | #6 | |
Hobbit
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: In your box
Posts: 44
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Quote:
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10-04-2005, 04:09 PM | #7 |
An enigma in a conundrum
Join Date: Oct 1999
Posts: 6,476
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I hates the blues, I loves the reds. I also believe in Hobbits.
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Vizzini: "HE DIDN'T FALL?! INCONCEIVABLE!!" Inigo: "You keep using that word. I do not think it means what you think it means." |
10-04-2005, 04:23 PM | #8 |
Hobbit
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: In your box
Posts: 44
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Red smarties? you eat the red ones last?
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10-04-2005, 10:21 PM | #9 |
Fenway Ranger, Lord of Red Sox Nation
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: College!
Posts: 1,976
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I'm not quite sure yet how much of an impact LOTR has had on me, but I do know it's chock full of Catholic allegory. Yes, I will answer objections, starting with Lotesse
P.S., welcome to the moot, Lil Roo ...you should get an avatar.
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Adventure...betrayal...heroism... Atharon: where heroes are born. My wife once said to me—when I'd been writing for ten or fifteen years—that I could always go back to being a nuclear engineer. And I said to her, 'Harriet, would you let someone who quit his job to go write fantasy anywhere near your nuclear reactor? I wouldn't!' (Robert Jordan) Last edited by Curubethion : 10-04-2005 at 10:22 PM. |
10-05-2005, 11:29 AM | #10 | ||
Friendly Neigborhood Sith Lord
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: USA
Posts: 2,080
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techically LOTR has spirutual applicability, not allegory, tolkien himself despised allegory and all its forms, granted there is a spirutual applicability that i'm sure you and Lotesse can argue about
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I was Press Secretary for the Berlioz administration and also, but not limited to, owner and co operator of fully armed and operational battle station EDDIE Quote:
Quote:
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10-29-2005, 05:04 PM | #11 | |
Dread Mothy Lord and Halfwitted Apprentice Loremaster
Join Date: Dec 2002
Location: Thomas Aquinas College, Santa Paula, CA
Posts: 10,820
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The answer is a definite and profound Yes. I have always my life considered the Lord of the Rings to be a deeply spiritual work, "true" on some gloriously fundamental level, and even more concretely, it helped me to come to have a greater respect for Catholicism, which was a contributing factor in my conversion from nondenominational Protestantism to Catholicism.
I actually have know some people who considered Tolkien's mythos to be true in an astounding literal sense; I seem to remember that they called themselves "Tolkienists". I am referring to the Book (singular!), in conjunction with Tolkien's mythos as a whole. Quote:
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Crux fidelis, inter omnes arbor una nobilis. Nulla talem silva profert, fronde, flore, germine. Dulce lignum, dulce clavo, dulce pondus sustinens. 'With a melon?' - Eric Idle |
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