The Story of 'The Hobbit'
Corey Olsen
What were the literary precursors to The Hobbit? What inspired Tolkien to write The Hobbit?
This course examines the life of J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Hobbit. We will examine several important precursors of the book, works that helped establish the genre in which Tolkien was writing, or which influenced Tolkien’s own thinking. We will then read not the final published version of The Hobbit, but follow the growth of the story in manuscript and typescript, examining carefully how the story developed and in what directions. We will then turn to the publication and reception of The Hobbit, including its adaptation to film. We’ll end the semester with a discussion of the Rankin-Bass animated Hobbit and a discussion of Peter Jackson’s The Hobbit films.
The class will also offer two guest lectures. These are hosted by Professor Olsen and feature scholars John D. Rateliff, author of The History of The Hobbit, and Douglas A. Anderson, author of The Annotated Hobbit, two of the foremost scholars on The Hobbit in the world.
created 4 months ago
An active subscription (at any level) grants access to this Project Room
and all other project rooms within Lectures.
- Supplementary Documents and Mediaadded about 1 month ago
- Lecture 11: Bag End to Beorn, Part 1added 25 days ago
- Lecture 12: From Bag-End to Beorn, Part 2added 16 days ago
- Lecture 13: From Mirkwood to the Lake, Part 1added 16 days ago
- Lecture 14: From Mirkwood to the Lake, Part 2added 16 days ago
- Lecture 15: At the Lonely Mountain, Part 1added 14 days ago
- Lecture 16: At the Lonely Mountain, Part 2added 14 days ago
- Lecture 17: Eucatastrophe and Return, the Third Phaseadded 14 days ago
- Lecture 18: Eucatastrophe and Return, the Fourth Phaseadded 14 days ago
- Lecture 19: Revisions and Rewritings, The Quest of Ereboradded 14 days ago