Tolkien Sessions at IMC Leeds, July 2019


I am very pleased to announce that all five sessions on J.R.R. Tolkien I proposed for the International Medieval Congress at Leeds 2019 have been accepted! This will be the 5th consecutive year of papers on J.R.R. Tolkien at IMC Leeds, after a successful series of sessions in 201520162017, and 2018. Leeds is, of course, a Tolkien-related location, and it is very fitting that his work will be once again explored in this prestigious conference. I am looking forward to a series of brilliant sessions and papers from well-established Tolkien scholars, alongside many new voices and perspectives!


Here are the sessions titles, abstracts, papers, speakers and times:


Session 130: Materiality in Tolkien’s Medievalism, I

Sponsor: School of Critical Studies, University of Glasgow

Organiser: Dimitra Fimi, School of Critical Studies, University of Glasgow

Moderator/Chair: Sara Brown, Independent Scholar

Session Time: Mon. 01 July – 11.15-12.45


Medieval Automata and J. R. R. Tolkien’s The Fall of Gondolin


Kristine Larsen, Central Connecticut State University


Tolkien as Letter-Writer


Deidre Dawson, Independent Scholar


I glin grandin a Dol Erethrin Airi: An Exploration of Tolkien’s ‘Heraldic Devices of Tol-Erethrin’


Andrew Higgins, Independent Scholar


Walking in Legend and on the Green Earth: Building the Verisimilitude of Tolkien’s Secondary World


Victoria Holtz-Wodzak, Viterbo University


 


Session 230: Materiality in Tolkien’s Medievalism, II

Sponsor: School of Critical Studies, University of Glasgow

Organiser: Dimitra Fimi, School of Critical Studies, University of Glasgow

Moderator/Chair: Kristine Larsen, Central Connecticut State University

Session Time:     Mon. 01 July – 14.15-15.45


From Mushrooms to Man-Flesh: The Cultural Significance of Food in the Material World of J.R.R. Tolkien’s Middle-Earth


Sara Brown, Independent Scholar


Corpses, Tomb, and Barrows: The Materiality of Death in Tolkien


Gaëlle Abaléa, Université Paris IV – Sorbonne


‘Cleaving the undead flesh’: Solid Blades and Invisible Foes in Middle-Earth


Aurélie Brémont, Université Paris IV – Sorbonne


Be Careful What You Bring for Your Journey: The Fate of the Fellowship Beaconed by Their Provisions


Aslı Bülbül Candaş, University of Glasgow


 


Session 330: Materiality in Tolkien’s Medievalism, III

Sponsor: School of Critical Studies, University of Glasgow

Organiser: Dimitra Fimi, School of Critical Studies, University of Glasgow

Moderator/Chair: Andrew Higgins, Independent Scholar

Session Time: Mon. 01 July – 16.30-18.00


Tolkien’s Elvish and Archaic First Map of Middle-Earth: Lost Connections in Space and Time


Erik Mueller-Harder, Independent Scholar


The Production of Secondary Manuscript Traditions


Brad Eden, Independent Scholar


Alan Lee’s Exploration of Tolkien’s Works: The Fall of Gondolin


Sultana Raza, Independent Scholar


From Finwë’s Winged Sun to the ‘Wheel of Fire’: Tolkien’s Heraldic Emblems as Signifiers in the Works of Sergei Iukhimov


Joel Merriner, University of Plymouth


 


Session 1046: J. R. R. Tolkien: Medieval Roots and Modern Branches

Sponsor: School of Critical Studies, University of Glasgow

Organiser: Dimitra Fimi, School of Critical Studies, University of Glasgow

Moderator/Chair: Deidre Dawson, Independent Scholar

Session Time: Wed. 03 July – 09.00-10.30


How Christian is The Lord of the Rings?: Tolkien’s Work Seen in the Context of the Biblical and                   Theological Tradition


Andrzej Wicher, Uniwersytet Łódzki


Tolkien’s Númenoreans and the Phaeacians: An Homeric Source before Plato’s Atlantis?


Hamish Williams, Universiteit Leiden


A Straussian Approach to Tolkien’s Medievalism: Or, Reading Tolkien’s Literary Adaptations in Light of the Conflict between Ancient and Modern


Dennis Wilson Wise, University of Arizona


The Medieval Faërie from Keats through Morris to Tolkien


William James Sherwood, University of Exeter


 


Session 1146: New Voices and New Topics in Tolkien Scholarship: A Round Table Discussion

Sponsor: School of Critical Studies, University of Glasgow

Organiser: Dimitra Fimi, School of Critical Studies, University of Glasgow

Moderator/Chair: Dimitra Fimi, University of Glasgow

Session Time: Wed. 03 July – 11.15-12.45


Participants:


Anahit Behrooz, University of Edinburgh


Michael Flowers, Independent Scholar


Dennis Wilson Wise, University of Arizona


This round table discussion will provide a forum for new scholars in Tolkien studies to share innovative approaches, new ideas, and underexplored areas of research. Dennis Wilson Wise’s research will discuss researching Tolkien via the lens of political philosophy; Anahit Behruz will focus on Tolkien’s texts as political and politicised texts, focusing on feminist, postcolonial, queer, and ecocritical readings; and Michael Flowers will discuss biographical and archival research on Tolkien, including online repositories but also fieldwork on location.

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Published on November 30, 2018 08:29
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