About the “Mordor” project
original date | 2017-09-28 22:32 utc |
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republished | 2024-06-06 00:51 utc |
topics | Dimitra Fimi; Thomas Honegger; Tolkien work; orig. on PostHope |
note | This post was originally published at PostHope, where it’s still available, along with several public comments. |
I mentioned in my first post 1 1 The reference to “my first post,” of course, means the first post on my cancer-focussed PostHope blog. The link here on this site is to that same post, but migrated to this official blog at erikmh.org. that I named this site Walking into Mordor only partially for the obvious reason — that in fact I’m also spending this time on a non-metaphorical Mordor-related project.
If all goes well, I will (finally!) be published, if only in the form of one chapter. The book, entitled Tolkien and Literary Worldbuilding, is being edited for Walking Tree Publishers by Dr. Thomas Honegger and Dr. Dimitra Fimi.
And my chapter will be “Mapping Mordor: Examining Tolkien’s Worldbuilding Method of ‘Construction by Revision.’”
Abstract
Even a cursory reading of any of the volumes of The History of Middle-earth shows that J.R.R. Tolkien constructed his literary works through a process of massive iterative revision. It is not surprising, therefore, that we can see Tolkien using the same method with his topography (the shape of the land itself), toponymy (the names he ascribes to places), and cartography (the maps which show his topography and toponymy). Primarily using Christopher Tolkien’s descriptions and re-drawings of several of his father’s “sketch-maps” in The Treason of Isengard and The War of the Ring, as well as the reproductions of these maps and others in Wayne Hammond and Christina Scull’s The Art of “The Lord of the Rings”, but drawing too from Tolkien’s linguistic notes and essays and other sources, this article journeys through the varied geography of secondary-world Mordor and through the chronology of Tolkien’s shifting thoughts in primary-world Oxford as he constructs the Middle-earth we are familiar with from The Lord of the Rings. It will show an ever-changing land, where familiar place-names refer to familiar — but different — places, where whole mountain ranges are moved, where familiar place-names are put together backwards, and where, in fact, it would be possible to simply walk into Mordor.
First phase
There are a lot of pieces to this project. The first steps actually involve finding every toponym (place name) Tolkien used for each location (mountain, range, river, tower, &c.) in Mordor and tracing his own changing conceptions of
- where it is
- what it is
- what it’s called
Sometimes all three changed over the course of his writing, which can really be a challenge to one’s brain — especially when combined with the possibility that some other location might pick up the use of a name that was discarded.
And that’s just step #1. More, anon.