| 		 Volume of Essays Provokes Discussion of
                  The Lord of the Rings and Western Civilization
                
                THE ESSAYS IN Celebrating Middle-earth: The
                  Lord of the Rings as a Defense of Western Civilization
(Inkling Books, 2002) grew out of presentations made at a conference hosted by ºù«ÍÞÊÓÆµ’s C.S. Lewis Institute
in 2001. The event not only drew 600 attendees from throughout the United States, but it also resulted in a provocative volume that is still being discussed by Tolkien fans and scholars.              
               “The intent behind the conference and the book was not primarily
                  Tolkien appreciation, or to enter into the minutia of Middle-earth,” explains SPU Associate Professor John West, who edited Celebrating
                  Middle-earth. “It was to get people to grapple with the truths expressed in Tolkien’s story and to ask themselves what difference those truths ought to make to their daily lives and to the world around them.”              
               West, a political scientist who has also
      published books on C.S. Lewis, religion, and politics, opens Celebrating
                Middle-earth with his own essay “The Lord of the Rings as a Defense of Western Civilization.” Other essay topics range from “Theology and Morality in The
                Lord of the Rings” to “Wartime Wisdom: Ten Uncommon Insights About Evil in The
                Lord of the Rings.” Contributors are Peter Kreeft, professor of philosophy at Boston
      College; Joseph Pearce, writer-in-residence at Ave Maria College; Janet Blumberg, emerita professor of English at SPU; Kerry Dearborn, associate professor of theology at SPU; and Phillip Goggans, associate professor of philosophy
      at SPU.              
                Since its publication, the book has received praise in interesting
                places, including from actor John Rhys Davies, who portrayed
                Gimli the dwarf in Peter Jackson’s “Lord of the Rings” film trilogy. In New Zealand, which has been declared by Jackson to be the closest equivalent to a real “Middle-earth,” a Christian
        radio station has broadcast recordings of the presentations multiple times.              
               West invited Rhys Davies to campus last January for a film and
                lecture event on The Lord of the Rings. Though West acknowledges
                that Jackson’s acclaimed films were “a labor of love,” he says
                that the movies “eviscerated many of the moral truths contained
                in Tolkien’s original story. Jackson really seemed out of touch
                with the moral depths of many of Tolkien’s
          characters.” West names Aragorn, Faramir, Theoden, and Saruman as “pale
          imitations”
          of Tolkien’s characters.               
               While some critics are uncomfortable with
            the cultural and historical interpre-tations of Tolkien’s work found
            in Celebrating Middle-earth, West responds: “If the essays misstate
            or twist Tolkien’s
            views or characters, then that’s a serious criticism. I suspect
            that the real problem here is that some of these critics
            don’t like Tolkien’s worldview.
            So the last thing they want is a book that tries to apply the ideas
            Tolkien articulated to the here and now.”               
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