It can be said that the true protagonist of J.R.R. Tolkien’s legendarium is not Frodo, Gandalf, or Aragorn, but Middle-earth itself. This immersive one-week summer school examines how Tolkien constructed one of the most fully realised secondary worlds in modern literature, and why its landscapes feel so uncannily alive.
Guided by the author of The Worlds of J.R.R. Tolkien: The Places That Inspired Middle-earth, the course investigates the interplay between imagination and reality in Tolkien’s creative process.
- How did his deep knowledge of topography, geology, and philology shape the contours of Middle-earth?
- In what ways did the physical and cultural landscapes of the real world; particularly those of Britain and the wider European tradition, inform the geography, societies, and mythic structures of his creation?
We invite you to explore how Tolkien’s writings portray the imprint of peoples on place: through archaeology, settlement, agriculture, industry, and war. Discussions will consider his responses to modernity: nationhood, environmental change, and the technologies of travel, and examine how these concerns are encoded in his fictional terrains. We will also ask: where might we glimpse Oxford in Middle-earth, and why does that matter?
More broadly, you will have the opportunity to reflect on the significance of place in literature and the human imagination. Through lectures, discussions, and guided explorations, this course illuminates how landscapes shape stories, and how stories, in turn, shape the way we see landscapes. This is an invitation to journey both into Middle-earth and into the creative mind of its maker.
This course is part of the Inspiring Oxford summer school programme, held at Brasenose College.