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Recherche : Masters, maitrises, DEA, thèses, articles sur JRR Tolkien
Thèses existantes.
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Anne NICOLLET, La symbolique féminine dans Le Seigneur des
Anneaux de J.R.R. Tolkien et La Tétralogie de Wagner
(maîtrise, Pau, 1995) -
Thomas GUILLUY, Challenging the Feminist Approach:
Tolkien's Female Entities as Inspiration and their Mythical Idealisation
(Maîtrise, Université Catholique d'Angers, 2004) - 1 more annotations...
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Interview: Talking Tolkien With Thomas Shippey *Writers Write -- The IWJ*
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Although some critics have alleged that The Lord of the Rings
relegates women to the background, I have always seen Tolkien as being rather
advanced for his time in his depiction of women. Eowyn, the lady of Rohan who
sneaks off to be a warrior certainly is no shrinking violet. As for Galadriel:
although her scenes are not lengthy in comparison with say, Gandalf's, her
presence lingers for many chapters after the characters have left Lorièn. What
is your opinion on this subject: how did Professor Tolkien feel about Galadriel?
About Eowyn?
I can only point to the scene in "The Houses of
Healing," where there is a careful and sensitive account of what it must have
been like for Eowyn, not only trapped at home while the men rode off to war, but
trapped with Wormtongue, and watching her uncle fall under his spell. This is a
striking and early sensitivity to the theme of female passivity, which people
often miss.
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Maîtrise Johnny Benoit - table des matières
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The broken sword : a forbidden
love? -
The Lord of the Nazgûls’ arch-nemesis: a woman:
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The Grey Havens - Tolkien: A Reflection on Tolkien's World: Gender, Race & Interpreted Political, Economic, Social & Cultural Allegories
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Eowyn who represents the potential of rebellion against the male value system
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Eowyn has to broadcast her gender
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Tolkien and Modernity
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Weinreich, Frank & Thomas Honegger (eds.) Tolkien and
Modernity -
"Against Stereotype:Éowyn and Lúthien as 20th-Century Women", Maria Raffaella
Benvenuto
"Politically Incorrect:Tolkien, Women, and Feminism", Laura Michel - 1 more annotations...
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Amazon.com: Women Among the Inklings: Gender, C. S. Lewis, J.R.R. Tolkien, and Charles Williams (Contributions in Women's Studies): Candice Fredrick, Sam McBride: Books
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Women Among the Inklings: Gender, C. S. Lewis, J.R.R.
Tolkien, and Charles Williams
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Confessions of a Crazy Schoolmarm: Tolkien's Women: Marian Imagery in The Silmarillion
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Varda is the closest equivalent in Middle Earth to the Queen of Heaven
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Both Yavanna and the Blessed Virgin are given tree-like attributes
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