Race, Gender, and the Other in Tolkien's Middle-earth
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LecturesChristopher Vaccaro, Dr. Sara Brown
J. R. R. Tolkien was born in South Africa to British parents. His family moved back to England before he was four, though his father stayed behind. Tolkien was a child of the Victorian British Empire, but was also orphaned by the time he was twelve years old. He was a Catholic in a largely Protestant country, and later a historical philologist in a more modern-leaning college. Tolkien understood marginalization and feelings of difference, and he was very sympathetic to this. In his work, we clearly see his sympathies towards women’s challenges, and towards the plight of indigenous peoples. That said, Tolkien could not step completely outside of the systemic problems of his culture. At times he falls back on culturally-recognized tropes and images that certainly do not dismantle racial or gender stereotypes, and may even reinforce them.

This course explores the issues of race, sexuality, gender, and Othering in the mythological legendarium of J.R.R. Tolkien, focusing primarily on The Lord of the Rings. We will examine the effects of gender on male and female characters, including the types of femininity and masculinity portrayed. We will confront the role of race in the texts, including issues around Blackness, Whiteness, and ethnicity. We will explore these questions simultaneously, through the intersections of race, gender, and issues of sexuality in Middle-earth. Tolkien’s writing continues to resonate in twenty-first century culture; this course aims to read his work through a twenty-first century optic.
  • Lecture 01: Introducing the Critical Theory
    01:40:38
    01:40:38
  • Lecture 02: Hobbits, Wraiths, Black Riders, and Farmer Maggot
    01:40:02
    01:40:02
  • Lecture 03: Tom Bombadil, Goldberry and the Squint-eyed Southerner
    01:54:03
    01:54:03
  • Lecture 04: Aragorn, Arwen and Glorfindel
    01:33:08
    01:33:08
  • Lecture 05: Frodo, Saruman and liminality
    01:47:29
    01:47:29
  • Lecture 06: Balrogs, Dwarves and Liminality
    01:42:41
    01:42:41
  • Lecture 07: Galadriel, Elves, Ethnicity, and the Sublime
    01:47:26
    01:47:26
  • Lecture 08: Orcs, Boromir, and the Edain
    01:35:48
    01:35:48
  • Lecture 09: Orcs, Ents, and the Riders of Rohan
    02:04:57
    02:04:57
  • Lecture 10: Gandalf, Eowyn and Wormtongue
    01:09:41
    01:09:41
  • Lecture 11: War, Masculinity, Gimli, and the Dwarves
    01:48:53
    01:48:53
  • Lecture 12: Saruman, Sauron, Aragorn and Pippin
    01:31:16
    01:31:16
  • Lecture 13: Gollum, Jung, Liminality, and the Uncanny
    01:45:31
    01:45:31
  • Lecture 14: Faramir, Spirituality and Belief
    01:34:29
    01:34:29
  • Lecture 15: Sam, Frodo, and Gollum
    01:30:28
    01:30:28
  • Lecture 16: Shelob, Sam, and the Orcs
    01:26:17
    01:26:17
  • Lecture 17: Spaces of Memory, Gender, and Eowyn
    01:45:17
    01:45:17
  • Lecture 18: Homoamory, Masculinity, Indigineity and Language
    01:51:44
    01:51:44
  • Lecture 19: Eowin, Aragorn, Eomer and Race
    01:34:49
    01:34:49
  • Lecture 20: Weeping, Leadership and Eucatastrophe
    01:53:41
    01:53:41
  • Lecture 21: Frodo, Sam and the Orcs
    01:37:08
    01:37:08
  • Lecture 22: Homoamory, Healing and Leadership
    01:36:17
    01:36:17
  • Lecture 23: Identity, Intimacy and Saruman
    01:55:47
    01:55:47
  • Lecture 24: The Foreigner, Sexuality, and Land As Gendered Space
    01:47:11
    01:47:11