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sigridhr ([personal profile] sigridhr) wrote2013-02-01 03:27 pm

Epic Tolkien Bookclub: Week Four

  Epic Tolkien Bookclub: Week Four (The Hobbit)
Chapter VII: Queer Lodgings 
Chapter VIII: Flies and Spiders

Rules

I very much doubt we'll require much in the way of formal rules, but just for the sake of formality and clarity:
  • Discussion is welcome and encouraged, as is disagreement. Name-calling and personal attacks will be punished by forced attendance at the Vogon-Orcish Poetry Recitation Competition in Minas Morgul.  
  • There is no spoiler policy in place. Although we're reading the Hobbit, please feel free to bring in things from other Tolkien works, any of the films, the History of Middle Earth, the Letters of JRR Tolkien, and, if you should like, other literary sources. 
  • There is no such thing as too much geekery. Or taking the text too seriously.  
  • If you have any concerns at any point, I'm the closest thing this gong show has to a mod, so feel free to get in touch. I can be reached either by PM through this site, or directly by email at sigridhr.lokidottir@gmail.com. 
Discussion on this post will officially run from Friday 1st February 2013 to Friday 8th February 2013. However, the post will remain open after that point, so you're more than welcome to continue discussions on. 
j_quadrifrons: Crop of a picture of Tenpou from Saiyuki Gaiden, lounging (Default)

[personal profile] j_quadrifrons 2013-02-02 02:55 am (UTC)(link)
Can I just talk about how much I love Beorn? Like Tom Bombadil, he doesn't seem to fit neatly into Tolkien's world, but he absolutely belongs there. He's a morally ambiguous character, frightening and bloodthirsty (I mean, he has an orc head and a warg skin on his door) but he is a good and loyal friend. (He kills Bolg in the BoFA.) And, of course, he's very much a literalization of the Nordic berzerker, in the same way that huorns are a literalization of "Birnam wood comes to Dunsinane."

The slow accumulation of Dwarves at Beorn's house is one of my very favorite things. That, and the fact that he doesn't know Gandalf. I do believe he's one of the only people in Middle Earth who doesn't know Gandalf.

"Flies and Spiders" always terrified me, not because of the spiders, but because of the dark. (In Tolkien, spiders and darkness are profoundly linked - Ungoliant creates a Darkness for Melkor to sneak around in, so probably these spiders, who are descendants of hers, do something similar.)

I also love the creepy Celtic fairy-tale-ness of Mirkwood. The sleeping river, the endless dreams, the fairy hunt, the black butterflies. Creepy and wonderful. I think this gets across the ethereal other-worldliness of the Elves much better than their ridiculous tra-la-la-lally in Rivendell, but of course Tolkien meant for both of them to be true.

This post is turning into an epic, so theorizing about Elves in a new comment.
j_quadrifrons: Crop of a picture of Tenpou from Saiyuki Gaiden, lounging (Default)

[personal profile] j_quadrifrons 2013-02-02 03:09 am (UTC)(link)
SO this is probably only relevant/interesting if you've read the Silmarillion, but I have two theories about how the Sil crept its way into the Hobbit while Tolkien was writing, and this is where the first of them comes in. I think Thranduil (the elf-king of The Hobbit, who's never actually named until the Appendices of LotR) was originally meant to be Elu Thingol, Elwë, and when Tolkien wrote Lord of the Rings and further developed the Sil stories he relocated some things in time and space.

Thranduil and Thingol are the only Elves who live in caves, which is pretty damn unusual for Elves - heck, even Legolas does a lot of complaining about caves in LotR, and he presumably grew up in Thranduil's cave-palace. The story about theft and/or payment causing a rift between the elf-king and the dwarves is damn near identical to the story in "Of the Ruin of Doriath" about Thingol and the Nauglamír, except for the part where Thingol gets killed.

Exactly how much of the story of Thingol and Doriath was written when Tolkien wrote The Hobbit is hard to say, but the similarities positively drip. Of course, by the time of LotR, Tolkien reconciled the two by naming the elf-king Thranduil, son of Oropher. Oropher was a refugee from Doriath, a survivor of the battle which killed Thingol, so now the two stories resonate nicely together. Thranduil has as much reason to distrust Dwarves as Thorin has to distrust Elves.
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[personal profile] halberdier 2013-02-03 01:08 am (UTC)(link)
Beorn speaks to me on so many levels. (Ursine name FTW! I love appropriate names for characters, and I can just picture Beorn ) I don't remember much about the first time I read it, but I do remember Beorn. My metaphoric ears pricked up at the mention of Beorn.

He has a code of honour all his own and still understandable: he will protect those he calls friend/family - even or especially from himself; he will defend his territory fiercely; he treats his servants/subordinates as well as he does his guests (even if he doesn't know the polite reply to the Dwarves' "At Your Service"es, lol) so hospitality win (how many mythologies hinge on good hospitality from random strangers? It feels like a lot).

Poor Bilbo is so very conscious of class differences, even after all he's been through: let me qualify that, and say that I don't think he's snobby, just hyper-aware of the absolute correct pecking order, whether anybody else cares about it or not. And he misses those poor buttons of his so much, it's sweet. Almost lost his life NOTHING compared to the gumdrop buttons on his waistcoat ;)

I'm arachnophobic and intend skipping any and all spidery bits. They have too many legs and eyes. What do they need them all for, anyway? (ANd why is fantasy as a genre so enamoured of them? Seriously, ALL the VGs I play have scary-ass spiders, all the books, all the movies, there is almost always an Acromantula or Frostbite Spider or something just around the corner. Do they know I'm scared?)

EDIT because apparently I don't know how to internet anymore (Google why you change format? WHY???)
Edited 2013-02-03 01:10 (UTC)

[identity profile] gallifaerie.livejournal.com 2013-02-03 10:13 am (UTC)(link)
I enjoyed these two chapters so much! So much happens in them, it's brilliant!

I quite liked the comparison between the dwarves, Beorn and the elves in terms of how they view treasure and things that they've crafted. The dwarves love their own handiwork, but they use it to make beautiful things made of precious metal and jewels. Beorn seems to make all of his own things, but using natural material, mostly wood, and for a purely practical purpose. And then it says that the elven-king had a treasure hoard that he's building up, but that his people don't actually make anything themselves. So you've got these three groups that all have different ideas about the value of handmade objects and what they're used for.

Another thing I noticed was that there seems to be some kind of connection between Bilbo and sleeping, or rather, the times when he's asleep. So far, there seems to be a recurring pattern that Bilbo is often awake at opportune times when the others are sleeping, then asleep or unconscious when the others are awake. Like when Bilbo awakes in the night when Gandalf and the dwarves are all asleep and hears scuffling at the door of Beorn’s hall; but in the morning, the dwarves are all up and having breakfast whilst he's still asleep. And earlier in the story, he's late setting out on the first day of the adventure because he wakes up late, and then there's the whole thing with waking up early in the goblin's front porch and realising what's happening before anyone else. And of course, he spends the final battle knocked out. I wonder if this is highlighting how different Bilbo is to the others, and also how useful this makes him to them – he ends up seeing things the others don’t see because he is conscious at different times (and he does literally have better eyesight than the dwarves as well).

Also, I didn't notice when reading The Hobbit before, but the spiders capturing the dwarves and binding them up in webs is basically a repeat of the trolls capturing them and putting them in sacks, with Bilbo being free in both situations. Only Gandalf was there to rescue them from the trolls, but this time Bilbo has to do it on his own. Which makes me so proud of how far he's come on this journey, because he's basically filling in for Gandalf. And the dwarves are so appreciative of him for that, and then I just get too many hobbit feelings and lose all coherence.

One of my favourite humorous parts of the book has got to be: ‘no spider has ever liked being called Attercop, and Tomnoddy of course is insulting to anybody.’

[identity profile] starliings.livejournal.com 2013-02-05 11:05 pm (UTC)(link)
I love Beorn so much, he's like an angry Hagrid. I kind of see him as a sort of a '"""Father Nature"""" figure (if that even is a thing); he treats the animals like his children, he can change his skin and he has a very practical approach to life (no trinkets or gold or prizes). Also I love how he's so gentle with his animals but fierce as hell to enemies. AND I like to believe that the 'large long-bodied grey dogs' are Irish Wolfhound-esque which is totally the breed of dog I would have if I had time/money/space because they are massive and shaggy and amazing. But I digress.

I think one of the best things about The Hobbit is the fact that there's always an underlying comedy of this truckload of dwarves hiking around everywhere. Like Gandalf constantly counting them, them all bowling into Bilbo's house and turning up in pairs for Beorn. I just love dwarves a lot. Like this bit: 'Some of them even got up and bowed right to the ground before him, though they fell over with the effort, and could not get on their legs again for some time.' WHAT'S NOT TO LOVE ABOUT DWARVES.

Ha, when I'm feeling particularly sorry for myself, the first description of Mirkwood totally reminds me of university/studying/being away from home. Reason number 3253633 why I may in actual fact be a Hobbit...

'Then the elves put thongs on him, and shut him in one of the inmost caves' I'm sorry to lower the tone but DEAR LORD THE MENTAL IMAGES

[identity profile] hibari-sensei.livejournal.com 2013-02-07 04:13 am (UTC)(link)
I was amused at how co-dependent the dwarves seemed when Gandalf was going to part ways with them.

I love the description of the butterflies Bilbo sees when he's up in the tree. In addition to being beautiful imagery, it highlights the fact that hobbits are more agrarian and love the simple things in life while dwarves seem more industrial.

It's also interesting that the butterflies are clearly something positive while the moths are scary. I had to pause and think about how big "nearly as big as your hand" is for a hobbit or a dwarf. That's already ginormous for a human!