Let Us Now Praise Famous Orcs: Simple Humanity in Tolkien's Inhuman Creatures (Critical Essay) Let Us Now Praise Famous Orcs: Simple Humanity in Tolkien's Inhuman Creatures (Critical Essay)

Let Us Now Praise Famous Orcs: Simple Humanity in Tolkien's Inhuman Creatures (Critical Essay‪)‬

Mythlore, 2010, Fall-Winter, 29, 12

    • 2,99 €
    • 2,99 €

Publisher Description

IN J.R.R TOLKIEN'S SPRAWLING LEGENDARIUM, the mythic world of Middle-earth and its suburbs, Orcs provide a seemingly endless supply of enemies to challenge the mettle of the noble Elves, Men, Dwarves, and Hobbits. As every reader of the books (and every viewer of the blockbuster films) knows, Orcs are the inevitable foot soldiers of "evil," employed by both the traitorous wizard Saruman and the Great Enemy Sauron in The Lord of the Rings, forming the infantry of Morgoth's vast armies in The Silmarillion, and being the one race against which all others unite in The Hobbit's Battle of Five Armies. For the most part, good and evil are strictly demarcated in Tolkien's world (with a few interesting exceptions), but, even by that almost Manichean standard, Orcs are presented with surprising uniformity as loathsome, ugly, cruel, feared, and especially terminable. In Tolkien's world, as Mary Ellmann once put it, "the only good Orc is a dead Orc" (225). Yet, as dedicated readers discern, Tolkien could not resist the urge to flesh out and "humanize" these inhuman creatures from time to time. In such examples as those I discuss below, Tolkien presents Orcs who have human--even humane--qualities, notwithstanding their generally negative characteristics. This fact makes it a bit disturbing, then, that Tolkien's heroes, without the least pang of conscience, dispatch Orcs by the thousands. Indeed, letters and unpublished manuscripts reveal that Tolkien himself struggled with the metaphysical and moral problems he had set up by inventing and using Orcs as he does.

GENRE
Professional & Technical
RELEASED
2010
22 September
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
24
Pages
PUBLISHER
Mythopoeic Society
SIZE
200.3
KB

More Books by Mythlore

"the Whole Art and Joy of Words": Aslan's Speech in the Chronicles of Narnia (Critical Essay) "the Whole Art and Joy of Words": Aslan's Speech in the Chronicles of Narnia (Critical Essay)
2003
A Darker Ignorance: C. S. Lewis and the Nature of the Fall (Critical Essay) A Darker Ignorance: C. S. Lewis and the Nature of the Fall (Critical Essay)
2003
Dwarves, Spiders, And Murky Woods: J.R.R. Tolkien's Wonderful Web of Words (Critical Essay) Dwarves, Spiders, And Murky Woods: J.R.R. Tolkien's Wonderful Web of Words (Critical Essay)
2010
Tolkiens's Sigurd & Gudrun: Summary, Sources, & Analogs (Jrr Tolkien's 'the Legend of Sigurd and Gudrun') (Table) Tolkiens's Sigurd & Gudrun: Summary, Sources, & Analogs (Jrr Tolkien's 'the Legend of Sigurd and Gudrun') (Table)
2009
The Thematic Organization of Spirits in Bondage (Critical Essay) The Thematic Organization of Spirits in Bondage (Critical Essay)
2009
Brothers of Perpetual Responsibility: Monasticism, Memory, And Penance in Cassutt, Donaldson, And Straczynski (1) (Michael Cassutt, Stephen R. Donaldson, J. Michael Straczynski) (Critical Essay) Brothers of Perpetual Responsibility: Monasticism, Memory, And Penance in Cassutt, Donaldson, And Straczynski (1) (Michael Cassutt, Stephen R. Donaldson, J. Michael Straczynski) (Critical Essay)
2003