FALL
2007 HONORS COURSES
HONR 208E J.R.R. Tolkien: Author
of the Century
Tuesday/Thursday 2-3:15 p.m.
Dr. Verlyn Flieger, Department of English
In the years between 1996 and 1999, several
British institutions, among them Waterstone’s bookshop chain, the Daily
Telegraph, the Folio Society, and the TV program Bookworm,
commissioned readers’ polls to determine the greatest books of the century.
J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings was the overwhelming
winner. Response from British critics and intellectuals was outraged
cries of horror and derision. In spite of such protest (or perhaps because
of it) this work and the creative imagination behind it deserve thoughtful
consideration for their impact on the century that produced both. The
course will study Tolkien’s major works, The Hobbit, The
Lord of the Rings, and The Silmarillion, as well as some
minor works (the alliterative verse drama The Homecoming of Beorhtnoth)
and Tolkien’s major scholarly criticism (his Andrew Lang lecture “On
Fairy-Stories,” and his landmark essay on “Beowulf: The Monsters and
the Critics.”)
Reading both fiction and scholarship in
the context in which Tolkien wrote–the period between the two major
wars–will throw light on mindset and confusion that marked the twentieth
century.
Impassioned discussion, a mid-term, a final
exam, and one long paper will encourage students to think seriously
about the century and its most popular book.
CORE–Literature [HL]