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G. B. Smith’s “Elzevir Cicero” and the Construction of Queer Immortality in Tolkien’s Mythopoeia

  • Following the death of J. R. R. Tolkien in 1973, an obituary appeared in The Times quoting Tolkien as having said that his “love for the classics took ten years to recover from lectures on Cicero and Demosthenes.” This contentious relationship between Tolkien and the Greco-Roman past contrasts with the work of unabashedly classicizing poet Geoffrey Bache Smith, a school friend of Tolkien’s who was killed in the Great War. When Tolkien collected Smith’s poems for posthumous publication, this paper shows, Smith’s engagements with the ancient world became part of Tolkien’s own philosophy of immortality through literary composition. Within his 1931 poem “Mythopoeia,” and his 1939 speech “On Fairy-Stories,” Tolkien articulated a unified method of mythmaking by looking back to his lost friend’s understanding of mythology as a type of ancient story-craft that enabled poets to preserve the dead against the ravages of time. By tracing a triangular path through the relationships between Tolkien, Smith, and the classical past inhabited byFollowing the death of J. R. R. Tolkien in 1973, an obituary appeared in The Times quoting Tolkien as having said that his “love for the classics took ten years to recover from lectures on Cicero and Demosthenes.” This contentious relationship between Tolkien and the Greco-Roman past contrasts with the work of unabashedly classicizing poet Geoffrey Bache Smith, a school friend of Tolkien’s who was killed in the Great War. When Tolkien collected Smith’s poems for posthumous publication, this paper shows, Smith’s engagements with the ancient world became part of Tolkien’s own philosophy of immortality through literary composition. Within his 1931 poem “Mythopoeia,” and his 1939 speech “On Fairy-Stories,” Tolkien articulated a unified method of mythmaking by looking back to his lost friend’s understanding of mythology as a type of ancient story-craft that enabled poets to preserve the dead against the ravages of time. By tracing a triangular path through the relationships between Tolkien, Smith, and the classical past inhabited by figures like Cicero, this paper argues that Tolkien not only recovered a “love for the classics,” but used classical texts to “recover” his lost friend, granting Smith a queer, classical immortality in return.zeige mehrzeige weniger

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Metadaten
Verfasserangaben:Kathryn H. StutzORCiD
DOI:https://doi.org/10.34679/thersites.vol15.225
ISSN:2364-7612
Titel des übergeordneten Werks (Englisch):thersites 15
Herausgeber*in(nen):Annemarie Ambühl, Filippo Carlà-Uhink, Christian Rollinger, Christine Walde
Publikationstyp:Wissenschaftlicher Artikel
Sprache:Englisch
Datum der Erstveröffentlichung:27.10.2022
Erscheinungsjahr:2022
Veröffentlichende Institution:Universität Potsdam
Datum der Freischaltung:01.11.2022
Freies Schlagwort / Tag:Geoffrey Bache Smith; John Ronald Reuel Tolkien; hauntology; mythopoeia; queer theory
Band:2022
Ausgabe:15
Seitenanzahl:32
Erste Seite:253
Letzte Seite:284
Organisationseinheiten:Philosophische Fakultät / Historisches Institut
DDC-Klassifikation:9 Geschichte und Geografie / 90 Geschichte / 900 Geschichte und Geografie
Peer Review:Referiert
Publikationsweg:Open Access / Gold Open-Access
Sammlung(en):Universität Potsdam / Zeitschriften / thersites, ISSN 2364-7612 / thersites Vol. 15
Lizenz (Deutsch):License LogoCC-BY - Namensnennung 4.0 International
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