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M. Kirner-Ludwig, S. Köser, S. Streitberger (éd), Binding them all. Interdisciplinary Perspectives on JRR Tolkien and His Works

M. Kirner-Ludwig, S. Köser, S. Streitberger (éd), Binding them all. Interdisciplinary Perspectives on JRR Tolkien and His Works

Publié le par Vincent Ferré (Source : Walking Tree Publishers)

 Binding them all. Interdisciplinary Perspectives on JRR Tolkien and His Works

Monika Kirner-Ludwig, Stephan Köser & Sebastian Streitberger (editors)

Cormarë Series No. 37

This volume "binds" a collection of selected papers that emerged from the J.R.R. Tolkien-lecture-series initiated at the University of Augsburg in 2014. Each of the papers is representative of the editors' interest in the interdisciplinary potentials of Tolkien's works and the joint venture to make his legacy visible and accessible from the viewpoint of numerous academic disciplines. Our contributors are experts as well as junior scholars from the fields of Literature and Linguistics, Geography, History, as well as Communications and Cultural Studies

Sommaire (les résumés sont accessibles sur le site de l'éditeur)

 Stephan Köser (with Monika Kirner-Ludwig & Sebastian Streitberger)
The Tolkien Journey at the University of Augsburg
1

Thomas Honegger
"Meet the Professor" A Present-day Colleague's View of Tolkien's Academic Life and Work
17
(abstract)

Monika Kirner-Ludwig
A Meta-pragmatic and Discourse-analytical Approach to Tolkien's "Beowulf The Monsters and the Critics": A Deliberate Look at its Edges, not its Center
39
(abstract)

Heike Krebs
"One trailer to bring them all and in the darkness bind them?" Lord of the Rings Trailers and their Communicative Functions
71
(abstract)

Birgit Schwan
Searching "For a Better Rhythm, or a Better Word or Phrase": Tolkien's Re-Telling of the Legend of King Arthur in Alliterative Metre
111
(abstract)

Heike Schwarz
Wounds That Can(not) Be Wholly Cured: Ecopsychology, Solastalgia and Mental Substainability in J.R.R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings
139
(abstract)

Magdalena Spachmann
Ethereal Elvish and Horrid Orkish: An Attempt to Capture J.R.R. Tolkien's Controversial Theory of Linguistic Aesthetics and Phonetic Fitness
169
(abstract)

Sebastian Streitberger
Concepts of Space in Middle-earth‘s Landscapes or the Potential of Fantasy and Film for School Geography
193
(abstract)

Sabine Timpf
Insights into Mapping the Imagined World of J.R.R. Tolkien
231
(abstract)

Carolin Tober
How J.R.R. Tolkien Used Kennings to Make The Lord of the Rings into a Medieval Epic for the 20th Century
253
(abstract)

Oliver M. Traxel
Exploring the Linguistic Past through the Work(s) of J.R.R. Tolkien: Some Points of Orientation from English Language History
279
(abstract)

Christine Vogt-William
Tolkien's Green Man: The Racialised Cultural Other Within and Green Spaces in The Lord of the Rings
305
(abstract)