The Lord of the Rings
| Name: | The Lord of the Rings | |
| Abbreviation(s): | LotR, LOTR; FOTR [Fellowship of the Ring], TTT [The Two Towers], ROTK [Return of the King] | |
| Creator: | John Ronald Reuel (J. R. R.) Tolkien (1892-1973) | |
| Date(s): | 1954-1955 (originally published in three volumes, The Fellowship of the Ring, The Two Towers, The Return of the King) | |
| Medium: | book, film | |
| Country of Origin: | England, UK | |
| External Links: | Encyclopedia of Arda, Tolkien Gateway, Council of Elrond, WarOfTheRing.net, The One Ring.net (TORn) | |
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In 1954-55 J.R.R. Tolkien published his epic fantasy novel, The Lord of the Rings, divided into three books: The Fellowship of the Ring, The Two Towers, and The Return of the King.[1]
Book Fandom
Letters to and from Tolkien after publication show that many readers became fans very quickly, asking questions about Middle-earth, the characters, and so on.[2]. In the 1960s, many people involved in the hippie counter-culture found resonance in LOTR, and it became not just a best-seller, but a part of the generational identity.[3] Groups of Tolkien admirers formed, including the Mythopeic society, The Tolkien Society, and shorter-lived gatherings, such as the Tolkien Fellowship at Michigan State University.[4]
Many words invented or adapted by Tolkien have become part of fannish vocabulary, including moot, mathom, pipeweed and smial. Fans used LOTR and Tolkien's later publications including the Silmarillion to teach themselves various of Tolkien's Elvish and Dwarvish languages and scripts. [5] [6]
The novel Bored of the Rings, a parody by the co-founders of National Lampoon, was published in 1969, suggesting that anti-fans were also quick to seize on the book.
Music Fandom
Tolkien's writings inspired hundreds, perhaps thousands of musical compositions, from classical[7] to death metal, perhaps most famously by Led Zeppelin.[8] [9] Rush's Geddy Lee and Motorhead's Lenny Kilmister both appeared in the Ringers documentary, talking about Tolkien's influence on them. In 2006, the Lord of the Rings Musical played in Toronto, moving to London for 2007-2008, but was not considered a success. [10]
- Tolkien's songs & poems set to tunes
- Starlit Jewel: the only U.S. authorized recording of songs from The Hobbit and Lord of the Rings
- Road Goes Ever On
- Filk
- Filthy Pierre's Microfilk included several LotR songs
- Tolkien Filk
Aca-fen and Academic Analysis of LOTR
- Acafen started writing about Tolkien. Some were granted access to Tolkien's unpublished papers, with a resulting conflict between them and those who were not.[11].
- other stuff here?
- lit crit and college classes?
- Semi-pro fans like Michael Martinez
The Line Between Tolkien Fandom and "Serious" Scholarly Studies
No clear dividing line. Some feel it lies with those who embrace the Hobbit and Lord of the Rings trilogy but have little awareness of Tolkien's lesser and posthumously published works of both fiction and non-fiction.
J.R.R. Tolkien's View on Fandom
He talked of a "deplorable cultus" and stated that ""Many young Americans are involved in the stories in a way that I'm not" [12]
Online Fandom
- online fandom started early, by 1993: alt.fan.tolkien and rec.arts.books.tolkien
- 1992 bibliography
Web Sites
- Languages and Elves
- The Thain's Book (LotR encyclopedia
- The Tolkien Society
- Encyclopedia of Arda
- Tolkien Gateway
- Council of Elrond
- WarOfTheRing.net
- The One Ring.net (TORn)
Film Fandoms
- The zine, Triode #18 (May 1960) contains a letter from J. R. R. Tolkien in response to "No Monroe in Lothlorien", in which he says that based on his experience with scripts and 'story-line' he feels that "only an overwhelming financial reward could possibly compensate an author for the horrors of the conversion of such a tale into film." (Hammond and Scull, The J.R.R. Tolkien Companion and Guide - Chronology, p. 557).
Early Animated films
Rankin-Bass: Hobbit and Return of the King: Animated television movies
Ralph Bakshi: The Lord of the Rings Animated film, only the first part was produced
- Wikipedia 1978 film page
- Ralph Bakshi site, Lord of the Rings page.
- Hobbits on Film: Ralph Bakshi's unfairly maligned Lord of the Rings By Glenn Gaslin, Slate, Wednesday, Nov. 21, 2001
Jackson, Walsh, Boyens: The Lord of the Rings film trilogy
A huge amount of fandom activity is based on these films
Main web site: The One Ring.net (TORn)
Before and during filming
- April 2000 TheOneRing.net started up (my guess, based on their preview page)
- fans worried beforehand, secrecy made it worse [13].
Fan response to films
- yes line parties for FOTR, inspired by Star Wars [13]
- FOTR comes out, the hoyay is fabulous, and Arwen gets Glorfindel's rescue
- Lord of the Rings FPF fanfiction ramps up
- New Zealand fandom site tours start?
- Extended DVDs with Fellowship of the Cast and commentaries
- Actor slash: RPS! much shipping! Lotrips
- Two Towers, definitely line parties
- TORn party #1
- Tinhats
- Collectormanias and Comic Cons, Ring*Con and cons all over the world
- ROTK comes out, yet more line parties, premieres, most of New Zealand
- TORn party #2
- a zillion Oscars
Continuing Fandom Activity
- yet more conventions
- trilogy showings
- 2005 Ringers documentary
- other stuff I'm not thinking of
- movie of The Hobbit to come
Fan Works
The Lord of the Rings has inspired a very large and creative fandom with literally thousands of web sites and blogs.
Fan Art
Fanart includes:
- Amon Hen: the Bulletin of the Tolkien Society
- Council of Elrond fanart
- LotR_FanArt group on Yahoo
- Photo manipulations or manips - The Theban Band (includes naked men and slash)
Fanfiction
The two broadest categories of fanfiction are FPF: Fictional people fiction, about characters from the books and movies) and RPF: Real people fiction, also known as LOTR RPS or Lotrips, which is fic written about the actors. Although some archives, communities, and challenges include both and some fans read and write both, many fans consider them to be separate fandoms.
Fanfiction Communities
These are some communities that encompass both RPF and FPF. See those pages for more community listings.
- Middle Earth News, LiveJournal announcement community begun in October 2004, formerly only for news about FPF fandom but includes some RPF news since April, 2008.[14]
- Lord of the Rings Fan Fiction Recs
- Sons of Gondor
Fanzines
While the Lord of the Rings movie fandom is primarily an online fandom, it has seen a fair share of print fanzines along with a robust amount of Doujinshi. You can find listings under List of Lord of the Rings Fanzines as well as by clicking on the LOTR Movie Fanzine Category.
Fanvids
Games
- Middle Earth Role-Playing Game (also known as RPGs)
- Tolkien computer games listing
- Wikipedia:Works inspired by J. R. R. Tolkien#Games
- Dungeons and Dragons - may or may not be directly inspired by LOTR
References
- ↑ Wikipedia:The Lord of The Rings
- ↑ Letters of JRR Tolkien
- ↑ Wikipedia:Tolkien fandom#1960s USA
- ↑ Personal communication, 2008-10-12
- ↑ Elvish Linguistic Fellowship
- ↑ Ardalambion (Tolkien's invented languages), The Tolkien Language List
- ↑ For example, see The Tolkien Ensemble and Johan de Meij's Symphony No. 1 "Lord of the Rings"
- ↑ tolkien-music.com
- ↑ Works Inspired by JRR Tolkien - Music
- ↑ Wikipedia:The Lord of the Rings (musical)
- ↑ Wikipedia:Elfconners
- ↑ Quoted in Time Magazine, 2002-12-02
- ↑ 13.0 13.1 The Fellowship of the Ring by Erik Davis, Wired, October 2001.
- ↑ Announcement that RPF news will be included, March 27, 2008. (Accessed October 24, 2008.)

