Tolkien Lecture on Fantasy Literature
Tolkien Lecture on Fantasy Literature
  • Видео 11
  • Просмотров 120 871
Maria Dahvana Headley, 'Tell Me A Story,' Tolkien Lecture 2023
"Tell Me A Story: How Fantastical Literature Has Been Shaped by Storytellers and Audiences." The 2023 Tolkien Lecture on Fantasy Literature, delivered by Maria Dahvana Headley on May 16 at Pembroke College, Oxford.
00:00 Lecture
41:39 Questions
Maria Dahvana Headley is the New York Times-bestselling, Hugo and World Fantasy Award-winning author of eight books, most recently Beowulf: A New Translation, which was named as a book of the year by The Atlantic Monthly, NPR, Vox, The Irish Times, The Guardian, the New Statesman, and more. It won the 2021 Harold Morton Landon Translation Award from the Academy of American Poets, and the 2021 Hugo Award for Best Related Work.
Her upcoming projects incl...
Просмотров: 2 223

Видео

Rebecca F. Kuang, 'Goodness, Beauty, and Truth: The Value of Art in Times of Crisis,' 2022
Просмотров 35 тыс.2 года назад
The 2022 Tolkien Lecture on Fantasy Literature, delivered by Rebecca F. Kuang on May 23 at Pembroke College, Oxford. 00:00 Lecture 32:16 Questions Rebecca F. Kuang is a Marshall Scholar, translator, and the Hugo, Nebula, Locus, and World Fantasy Award nominated author of the Poppy War trilogy and the forthcoming Babel. She has an MPhil in Chinese Studies from Cambridge and an MSc in Contemporar...
Marlon James, 'Our Myths, Our Selves,' Tolkien Lecture 2019
Просмотров 13 тыс.5 лет назад
The seventh annual J.R.R Tolkien Lecture on Fantasy Literature. Pembroke College, Oxford, 26th February, 2019. tolkienlecture.org Marlon James is the author of the New York Times bestseller A Brief History of Seven Killings, The Book of Night Women, and John Crow’s Devil. A Brief History of Seven Killings won the Man Booker Prize, the American Book Award and the Anisfield-Wolf Award for Fiction...
V.E. Schwab, 'In Search of Doors,' Tolkien Lecture 2018
Просмотров 27 тыс.6 лет назад
The sixth annual J.R.R Tolkien Lecture on Fantasy Literature. Pembroke College, Oxford, 1st May 2018. tolkienlecture.org Victoria “V.E.” Schwab is the #1 NYT, USA, and Indie bestselling author of more than a dozen books, including Vicious, the Shades of Magic series, and This Savage Song. Her work has received critical acclaim, been featured by EW and The New York Times, been translated into mo...
Susan Cooper, 'A Catch of the Breath', Tolkien Lecture 2017
Просмотров 11 тыс.7 лет назад
The fifth annual J.R.R Tolkien Lecture on Fantasy Literature. Pembroke College, Oxford, 27th April 2017. tolkienlecture.org Susan Cooper is best-known as the author of fantasies for children and young adults, notably the five-book sequence The Dark is Rising, whose awards included the Newbery Medal and two Carnegie Honours. At Oxford she was the first woman to edit Cherwell, and she worked as a...
J.R.R. Tolkien's 'A Secret Vice': 85 Years On
Просмотров 1,5 тыс.7 лет назад
Tolkien scholars Dimitra Fimi and Andrew Higgins discuss J.R.R. Tolkien’s essay ‘A Secret Vice’, delivered 85 years ago (to the day!) at Pembroke College, Oxford, where the talk was originally given. In 2016 Dimitra and Andrew published the first ever critical study of the essay, reproducing it alongside a new essay and drafts from Tolkien’s manuscripts, accompanied by detailed editorial notes ...
Terri Windling 2016 Lecture: Q&A
Просмотров 6718 лет назад
Terri Windling is a writer, editor, and artist specialising in fantasy literature and mythic arts. She has published over forty books, winning nine World Fantasy Awards, the Mythopoeic Award, the Bram Stoker Award, and placing on the short lists for the Tiptree and Shirley Jackson Awards. She received the S.F.W.A. Solstice Award in 2010 for ‘outstanding contributions to the speculative fiction ...
Terri Windling, 'Reflections on Fantasy Literature in the Post-Tolkien Era,' Tolkien Lecture 2016
Просмотров 3,3 тыс.8 лет назад
The fourth annual J.R.R Tolkien Lecture on Fantasy Literature. Pembroke College, Oxford, 26th May 2017. tolkienlecture.org Terri Windling is a writer, editor, and artist specialising in fantasy literature and mythic arts. She has published over forty books, winning nine World Fantasy Awards, the Mythopoeic Award, the Bram Stoker Award, and placing on the short lists for the Tiptree and Shirley ...
Lev Grossman, 'Fear and Loathing in Aslan’s Land‘, Tolkien Lecture 2015
Просмотров 7 тыс.9 лет назад
The third annual J.R.R Tolkien Lecture on Fantasy Literature. Pembroke College, Oxford, 13th May 2015. tolkienlecture.org Lev Grossman is a novelist and journalist. As a novelist, he is best known for writing the critically acclaimed Magicians Trilogy, comprising The Magicians (2009), The Magician King (2011), and The Magician’s Land (2014). The series has topped New York Times best-selling lis...

Комментарии

  • @kijanajenkins2546
    @kijanajenkins2546 Месяц назад

    Lovely video.

  • @Sams911
    @Sams911 2 месяца назад

    impressive that she's smart enough to be able to do it, but I'm not at all impressed with her translation of Beowulf... but then taste is a bit subjective.

  • @bobbybaucom9440
    @bobbybaucom9440 3 месяца назад

    This afternoon I have a book discussion at the local library of Yellowface, R.F. Kuang's popular novel. To learn a bit more about the book, in addition to reading it, naturally, I watched a few You Tube video reviews. Some were very positive while others less so. I was wondering to myself while listening to the reviews if Ms. Kuang listen to them much like June Hayward aka Juniper Song, did in the book. I guess that's the life of every author, no matter how successful. The best to all of you and good reading.

  • @jack.6956
    @jack.6956 5 месяцев назад

    Lol "bigots see themselves as the hero" shes talkin about herself the little hypocrit. Just read babel, i had to force myself to finish it

  • @jack.6956
    @jack.6956 5 месяцев назад

    Babel was decent

  • @wtfiswrongwithmee
    @wtfiswrongwithmee 5 месяцев назад

    “there’s love in the air… in hell” cant wait to read a romcom by rf kuang!!!!!!

  • @OneDaveAtaTime
    @OneDaveAtaTime 7 месяцев назад

    A book that hides behind fiction and a shallow storyline to enable the pathetic unintelligent uninformed author to publish her hate, prejudice and racism. She shows her immaturity through advocating violence, anarchy and a breakdown of law and order. Books that promote hate have been banned for less. What is clear is her own hypocrisy as she obtains her lavish ‘silver’ riches from the book sale in a global capitalistic economy.

  • @manzoorahmed366
    @manzoorahmed366 8 месяцев назад

    She's got the purpose of art all wrong

  • @kennethcosgrove9423
    @kennethcosgrove9423 8 месяцев назад

    Really beautiful. Lovely talk.

  • @PitchBlackForge
    @PitchBlackForge 9 месяцев назад

    This woman did the opposite of what the professor said was proper when treating an ancient text. And now she dares to invoke him. Shameful.

  • @nikhilmavi6076
    @nikhilmavi6076 10 месяцев назад

    I think I’ll need a lecture on this lecture

  • @adamgrofe9989
    @adamgrofe9989 10 месяцев назад

    That lecture was so good that I decided to buy Babel!

  • @tolkorm
    @tolkorm Год назад

    Best middle earth professor ever!

  • @rohanxdavis
    @rohanxdavis Год назад

    Excellent lecture Rebecca. I salute you.

  • @ShubhamBhushanCC
    @ShubhamBhushanCC Год назад

    It's amazing that we only think propaganda comes from the suppressed

  • @elinstar6034
    @elinstar6034 Год назад

    There's nothing wrong with a good stick as a walking companion!

  • @SaralinaLove
    @SaralinaLove Год назад

    Ironic that she speaks against bigotry and hate when her book Babel promotes these exact things. I’m deeply concerned young people or anybody who is reading her books that are covert propaganda clearing leaning in a certain direction

    • @phaioncirrus3818
      @phaioncirrus3818 Год назад

      exactly. remember HER type of bigotry/hate (the leftist kind) is OK and is to be tolerated. Leftists are allowed to be bigoted, it's only if you're conservative then it's not ok

    • @derlis_whatever7033
      @derlis_whatever7033 Год назад

      you really didn't listen to the lecture so you should just leave honestly

    • @derlis_whatever7033
      @derlis_whatever7033 7 месяцев назад

      @@Hengest-Horsa no, he proved her point actually

    • @derlis_whatever7033
      @derlis_whatever7033 7 месяцев назад

      @@Hengest-Horsa 😂

    • @jack.6956
      @jack.6956 5 месяцев назад

      Agreed. She's a hypocrit and a fool

  • @Asummersdaydreamer14
    @Asummersdaydreamer14 Год назад

    Thank you for sharing her lecture, and thank goodness Tolkien shared his writing

  • @m.b.2709
    @m.b.2709 Год назад

    im so happy that she exist

  • @azmilog
    @azmilog Год назад

    fantastic lecture : )

  • @zohalarbabzada9654
    @zohalarbabzada9654 Год назад

    R.F Kuang perfectly captured my unspoken thoughts on the over-emphasis of readers on the themes in novels in contributing to the value of literature in contemporary society!

  • @tazcooper3169
    @tazcooper3169 Год назад

    @ 1:07:55 - Tolkien would probably have agreed on skipping the battle scenes to get to the next long journey; he wrote in a letter criticising a proposed film version that "the most important part of the whole work, the journey through Mordor and the martyrdom of Frodo, has been cut in preference for battles; though it is the chief point of The Lord of the Rings that the battles were of subordinate significance."

  • @YourTrueShelf
    @YourTrueShelf Год назад

    I was so happy that this lecture was available online. Rebecca was a brilliant speaker, and I learned and considered new things from her talk. Questions were also very interesting. I'm reading Babel at the moment and it's wonderful.

  • @billyalarie929
    @billyalarie929 Год назад

    the little tidbit on "show vs. tell" absolutely blew my mind out of the W A T E R Rebecca is such a valuable force on this world. she's going to take us into the heart of this millennium, until it's finally beating again. let's go.

    • @billyalarie929
      @billyalarie929 Год назад

      as a person with a disability, i think it's time to put my voice in the hat, of writers who challenge the status quo of white/straight/cis/ablebodied/etc.............. 🤔

  • @zuzannablackmore4625
    @zuzannablackmore4625 Год назад

    I can't read his books because they are to graphic but I could listen to him for hours on end.

  • @EdrickSnowbeard
    @EdrickSnowbeard Год назад

    I really don’t like Rebecca

    • @legendswithjasper
      @legendswithjasper Год назад

      Personally, I think she’s brilliant. To each their own

    • @billyalarie929
      @billyalarie929 Год назад

      lol great response, Ghoul. really living up to your name, there, buddy.

    • @Kiki-oo3bw
      @Kiki-oo3bw Год назад

      you don't even know her, wtf 💀

    • @EdrickSnowbeard
      @EdrickSnowbeard Год назад

      @@billyalarie929 just look at her acceptance speech for the 2020 Hugo Awards and you’ll see what I mean. Also, you don’t have to be a passive aggressive dick.

    • @EdrickSnowbeard
      @EdrickSnowbeard Год назад

      @@Kiki-oo3bw from what I’ve seen of her, it’s more than nauseating.

  • @RealmoftheBlackShadow
    @RealmoftheBlackShadow Год назад

    Ordinary mortals are too stupid anyway. They deserve stupidity.

  • @RealmoftheBlackShadow
    @RealmoftheBlackShadow Год назад

    Fantasy is but fantasy.

  • @joshualavender
    @joshualavender Год назад

    Thank you, Ms. Kuang, for having the courage to criticize the publishing world's current obsession with identity and labels, and for pointing out the myopic reading this leads to. Your critique puts me in mind of how Jeanette Winterson observed in Art Objects (I'm paraphrasing from memory) that publishing work or reviewing it favorably merely because the writer is gay or the work is about homosexual experience ultimately does a disservice to the writer and to literature. The one novel I've written so far features characters across the range of sexuality and centers a love story between a lesbian woman and a bisexual woman. The novel is a far-future, post-Singularity dystopia about digital disembodiment. The idea that readers are primed to take it as instead being about homosexuality, with some readers embracing it and others reviling it for that when all I've done is allow characters to be who they are and love whom they choose, is disheartening. The idea that, because of this priming, some agents and editors are assessing the manuscript simply for its strength as "representation" and missing its point entirely is not only disheartening but infuriating. For the sake of writers like me who write with diversity but not *about* diversity (and also hate the use of the word "diversity" in book marketing), I hope the publishing world takes heed of your criticism and course-corrects to engage readers with what we're really writing about. Also, your book Babel sounds fascinating and I look forward to reading it. Also, congrats on your engagement!

  • @joshualavender
    @joshualavender Год назад

    Great lecture! I related enormously to Schwab's story about, as a child, wanting the world to be magical and *more* than it is. I felt much the same way, and fantasies swirled around me, overlaying the real world, so it's not terribly surprising that eventually I became a writer too.

  • @dionshaewishum4179
    @dionshaewishum4179 Год назад

    This man is interesting. I would even say rare. His conversation is crisply informative, thoughtful and full of wisdom. Wow

  • @kaliloon
    @kaliloon Год назад

    "...we've fallen into the habit of reading and critiquing books solely for their themes and messages, or what we think are their themes and messages, rather than reading them as explorations of all the infinite ways that one can be human." 12:40 this really struck a chord for me

  • @satishvarshney8202
    @satishvarshney8202 Год назад

    "I grew wanting the world to be stranger than it was" - V.E. Schwab

  • @andyapricot4104
    @andyapricot4104 Год назад

    4:43

  • @peetypete13
    @peetypete13 Год назад

    When she said, “Bigots seeing themselves as the hero” that was some powerful stuff.

    • @EdrickSnowbeard
      @EdrickSnowbeard Год назад

      By that logic, Rebecca is now a bigot since she paints herself as a hero for people of color in fantasy. And I would have to agree…Rebecca Kuang is a bigot.

    • @jack.6956
      @jack.6956 5 месяцев назад

      She's talking about herself

  • @Luka-zr4ue
    @Luka-zr4ue 2 года назад

    😔 ρɾσɱσʂɱ

  • @robertnewberry7799
    @robertnewberry7799 2 года назад

    Hey VE, I was wondering if you were interested in a date. Perhaps I could read you The Lord of the Rings?

  • @justinadair5458
    @justinadair5458 2 года назад

    Great talk and follow-up Q&A, I really enjoyed it. Kuang is a treasure and we're lucky to have her writing. Can't wait to read Babel!

  • @Tonywozere99
    @Tonywozere99 2 года назад

    You couldn't spell out the 2 Chinese reformers mentioned around the 5-6minute mark by Rebecca please?

    • @warmybear1009
      @warmybear1009 2 года назад

      Liang Qichao & Lu Xun (deaf so going off subtitles but I think that's them!)

    • @Tonywozere99
      @Tonywozere99 2 года назад

      @@warmybear1009 subtitles, of course, shud have turned them on. Thanks for that

    • @warmybear1009
      @warmybear1009 2 года назад

      @@Tonywozere99 ha no worries!

  • @angeliprimlani9389
    @angeliprimlani9389 2 года назад

    OMG THANK YOU THANK YOU THANK YOU THANK YOU THANK YOU THANK YOU!

  • @davidwinkle2818
    @davidwinkle2818 2 года назад

    She touched on a contradiction at the heart of modern fantasy. Part of its appeal is escapism, for sure. But because art is never made from a vacuum, it cannot be fully seperate from real life or from real human experiences. The fantasy author and blogger Brian De Leonard once said that if you want pure escapism, it is better to play tetris.

    • @baloog8
      @baloog8 7 месяцев назад

      Tetris reminds me of the different shape objects my ex wife threw at me in succession.

  • @warmybear1009
    @warmybear1009 2 года назад

    Love this! I read The Poppy War because someone said it did something quite new (in their experience) regarding violence & the cost of war within fantasy but came out thinking that a certain character was both monstrouous and also felt that it was interesting & somewhat relatable that their journey started on wanting to find their own worth & defend what was important to them. I got why Rin did what she did and was just thankful this wasn't a book and me in her shoes. It took me a long time to read & I have multiple learning disabilities but it felt more like through a horrific & terrifying scenario I felt like I grew a little, learnt a little & developed a little. I'm not sure if I've explained it well but Ms Kuang's work resonated in a way I wasn't expecting and I'm very thankful for her work.

  • @ohsoabby4689
    @ohsoabby4689 2 года назад

    I’ve been looking forward to watching this for so long and it somehow still exceeded expectations!!! Such a thoughtful lecture👏

  • @grafffuller3265
    @grafffuller3265 2 года назад

    Thank you for this wonderful lecture. Learning how you gathered your information for the books, even while studying and gaining your degree is quite impressive. You time management must be incredible. I find for myself going ONE way or ANOTHER, but the balancing of the BOTH incredibly difficult. Your thoughtful words about your experience as a writer was truly insightful and appreciated. I've read your Poppy War series twice and am looking forward to reading Babel...and your romance book that takes place in hell (so interesting). Congratulations on your engagement. May the two of you continue to inspire each other both in your relationship and in your careers. Again, thank you for this lecture.

  • @metalflames777
    @metalflames777 2 года назад

    Speaking to the purpose of fantasy in times of trauma and crisis: "Fairy tales do not tell children the dragons exist. Children already know that dragons exist. Fairy tales tell children the dragons can be killed." - G.K. Chesterton

  • @kit888
    @kit888 2 года назад

    00:01 Intro 07:00 Tolkien quote, ox soup Leaving details to the reader's imagination 19:20 Working definition of Magic Realism Why use magic in Fantasy 26:30 Detailed versus vague descriptions of magic in a book 32:50 Effecting a change in the reader 37:20 Q&A

  • @korennpendleton2027
    @korennpendleton2027 2 года назад

    Had to watch some of this for my class. Let's go, Brandon!

  • @jessicamcnealy1455
    @jessicamcnealy1455 2 года назад

    Um um ummm um....

  • @willd1mindmind639
    @willd1mindmind639 2 года назад

    The bottom line is Tolkien took the time and energy to fully flesh out and describe an imaginary world based on European myth and legend. And that effort became the template for what would later emerge as the "high fantasy" genre, where you can imagine all kinds of variations of the theme of elves, orcs, goblins, wizards and so forth. And within High Fantasy there ample opportunity for all kinds of diversity based on the creativity and imagination of those making worlds in that genre. So the idea that Tolkien is somehow stifling diversity in mythology and storytelling is absolutely false. One only needs to look at all the games, books and other media in this genre to see that this is not the case. What is actually the problem is that Africans don't have an entertainment industry of their own that they can use to finance a $1 billion dollar epic fantasy story in live action. So instead of addressing that, they will claim they need to be "represented" in stories not made by them because somehow that is better than making your own.

    • @thewatcher7940
      @thewatcher7940 Год назад

      You're missing a TON of context here. The majority of people asking for representation are probably people of color in the West, because we're the ones more likely consuming the content since the content is in English and we speak English. But Hollywood is still dominated by white people. There certainly are thousands of black storytellers in the US who want to bring their stories to the screen. I'm one of them. But we don't control that. Hollywood for example is dominated by companies that don't like to take risks, and to get onto the big screen you have to sell your soul to them in a sense. In the .1% chance they actually give a black person a platform to tell their stories, the corporations are generally going to try and twist them to appeal to as many people as possible, which results in a watered down version of it. And with people outside the West, they may watch our movies and be inspired, but they have even less of a chance to get big since they live so far away. And especially in so called "3rd world" countries, many of these people don't have access to the money or opportunities to even be able to start learning to make movies or publish books. Because the countries that colonized them robbed them of their potential.

    • @willd1mindmind639
      @willd1mindmind639 Год назад

      @@thewatcher7940 But that's exactly the point, black people in the west are not asking for black versions of white characters. That is mostly coming from white producers, show runners and executives who are too lazy or uninterested to actually find and develop actual black stories. Not to mention the whole point is that diversity starts with those positions of power within Hollywood, not fictional characters on screen. The assumption being that black producers, executives and show runners would take a chance on original black stories whereas others wouldn't. But hollywood is more concerned with symbolism via fictional characters than actual positions within these corporations. Unfortuantely that leads to a situation where so many black actors are just happy to get a job and will speak and say whatever they need to say to promote it. Even if it doesn't promote actual black culture, history or creativity as opposed to just tokenism.

  • @lutherallen9614
    @lutherallen9614 2 года назад

    Also remember castophes are also roots of broken laws, laws of man, and laws of nature