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Oxonmoot 2024 has ended
Friday August 30, 2024 1:35pm - 2:05pm BST
"The basis of J.R.R. Tolkien’s worldbuilding lies in the prime magic of languages and music (Fimi and Higgins, 2016 ; Flieger, 2020). Their evolution and transmission through ages and between species take many forms, depending on the literary genre adapted by Tolkien (myths, legends, folktales); and depending on the beings who share those songs in the fiction (spirit or corporeal, good or evil) (Fimi, 2008 ; Carruthers, 2016). In the ever-threatened world of faërie, defending or longing for homelands are building motives. From the Songs of Power preserved in ancient Elvish lays, to the folkloric Hobbit-rhymes, homelands are often referred to, either loosely evoked or directly invoked. Calling upon selected songs from the legendarium, this paper explores the different genres and effects of the musical conjurations of land and home in Tolkien’s writings.

In the “Ainulindalë”, divine spirits sing the universe and beings into existence, while the world is threatened and reshaped by the songs of evil forces at work. On the other hand, the Second Song at the end of time comes with a re-categorization of species, especially marginalized people, and thus tackles the question of minorities and beings in Tolkien’s fantasy system.
In the legendarium, home-related songs can affect both the elements and the audience. They fuel characters with courage or despair, by way of simple reminiscences, or through effective visions occurring in key moments of the narrative.
Those songs conjure ancient, foundered homelands (Rhymes of Lore), current households (Bath Songs), or cozy homes to return to (Walking songs). Other declinations of home-related songs convey an imminent menace, whether the antagonist’s household is threatening (“Clap! Snap! The black crack!” In The Hobbit) or being threatened (“The Ent's Marching Song” in The Lord of the Rings). Quite often, the endangered or long-lost homeland is used as a weapon during epic battles, bordering on the enchantment (the duel between Finrod and Sauron, The Silmarillion), or used as an empowering incantation (Lúthien’s lament before Mandos, Beren and Lúthien). Finally, conjuring home creates a sense of belonging that is shared between Peoples, whether one shares the beauty of their homeland (Finrod’s encounter with Men, The Silmarillion), or pays homage to their foreign friends (Bilbo’s Song of Eärendil, The Lord of the Rings).
By invoking ancient or distant lands, Home Songs transgress every border: they conjure the almost forgotten into the present, transmute the foreign into the familiar, and alter the dialectics of the high and the low."


Speakers
avatar for Clara Colin Saïdani

Clara Colin Saïdani

The Tolkien Society
Clara Colin Saïdani holds a bi-Master’s degree in English, French and Comparative literature from the University of Nantes, at the end of which she defended a thesis entitled “High mythopoeia or J.R.R. Tolkien’s mythopoeic quest in The Silmarillion”, and two research papers... Read More →
Friday August 30, 2024 1:35pm - 2:05pm BST
1 - Mary Ogilvie Lecture Theatre & Online (Webinar Strand)

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