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Founded in 2005, the Silmarillion Writers' Guild exists for discussions of and creative fanworks based on J.R.R. Tolkien's The Silmarillion and related texts. We are a positive-focused and open-minded space that welcomes fans from all over the world and with all levels of experience with Tolkien's works. Whether you are picking up Tolkien's books for the first time or have been a fan for decades, we welcome you to join us!

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SWG News

Sign-Up to Hand Out Scavenger Hunt Prompts
Our May challenge will be a Matryoshka built around a scavenger hunt. If you'd like to hand out prompts (and receive comments on your work for doing so!), you can sign up to do so.

New Challenge: Everyman
Create a fanwork about an ordinary character in the legendarium using a quote about an unnamed character as inspiration.

Cultus Dispatches: Fanworks, AI, and Resistance by Dawn and Grundy
The fan studies column Cultus Dispatches returns with a history of how Tolkien fanworks fandom has reacted and resisted generative AI by drawing strong boundaries in a way that is not typical for the fandom.

Instadrabbling Sessions for April, May, and June
Instadrabbling continues on the first Saturday of each month on our Discord server.

Known Site Issues

New & Updated Fanworks

[Writing] An Early Loremaster by Himring

Early in the history of Numenor, Elros's son Vardamir not only gathers much lore himself, but also assembles an early circle of loremasters around him. 


One of these is Tegilbor, who reflects about lore, Elvish and otherwise.

[Writing] Blood and Copper on the Cliffs by Tathrin

Trapped upon the bitter cliff, Maedhros dreams. Or hallucinates. Or endures the mental torments of the Dark Vala, Morgoth. Surely, one of those must be the case; for he cannot have been rescued from Thangorodrim's torturous peak. He cannot.


But then, why is Findekáno here?

…

[Writing] Day Will Come Again by gaydhros

On the morning of the day Fingon was to die, the sun rose bright over a shining sea of metal.

[Writing] The Mirror Crack'd by AdmirableMonster

Rescued from a brutal Angband hunt, an ex-thrall with a strange and powerful artifact embedded in his spine is brought to Himring, for it is one of the only places in Beleriand which welcomes such folk. Though he has no memories of his life before, Anniavas slowly becomes accustomed to his new…

[Writing] From That Rubble by StarSpray

Fëanor shrugged, studying the contents of his wine glass. “Something must be done about that house. It will fall down eventually.”
“It does not follow that it must be you that tears it down single-handedly. Are you sure you do not want help?”
“It’s not as though I…

[Writing] Akedah by Zdenka

A fragment from a Dwarvish version of their creation story. (Drabble.)

[Series] Instadrabbling, 2026-Present by SWG Moderators

We get together from time to time on the SWG Discord and produce spontaneous fanworks based on randomly chosen prompts. This collection includes drabbles, ficlets, and other flash fanworks produced as part of our instadrabbling sessions beginning in 2026.

Current Challenge

Everyman
Create a fanwork about an ordinary character in the legendarium using a quote about an unnamed character as inspiration. Read more ...

Random Challenge

You Can't Go Home Again
What would happen if one of Tolkien's characters returned to a beloved home after a long absence? Read more ...

New in References

Fandom Draws the Line: Fanworks, AI, and Resistance by Dawn Felagund, Grundy

By definition, fanworks fandom does not draw a lot of boundaries, but community archives and events have taken a strong stance against AI-generated fanworks due to ethical considerations and member input.

Grief, Grieving, and Permission to Mourn in the "Quenta Silmarillion" by Dawn Walls-Thumma

In a book as full of death as the Quenta Silmarillion, grief and mourning are surprisingly absent. The characters who receive grief and mourning—and those who don't—appear to do so due to narrative bias. Grief and mourning (or a lack of them) serve to draw attention toward and away from objectionable actions committed by characters.

Tolkien, Lunatic Physicists, and Abnegation by Cynthia (Cindy) Gates

This presentation for Mereth Aderthad 2025 discusses the parallels between the concept of abnegation in the scientific work surrounding the atomic bomb and in The Silmarillion. The relinquishment of self-interest in favor of the interests of others, abnegation was identified by Tolkien as a powerful act of spirit and reason. The legendarium has many examples of the complexities of abnegation, which parallel similar discussions held by physicists during and after World War II.

Featured Themed Collection

Beyond the Silmarillion

[Artwork] The Mirror of Galadriel by skywardstruck

Smoke rises from the Mirror, where the Lady of Lothlórien awaits to share its visions.

[Writing] Bar-en-Eladar by Gabriel

Out of the shadow, light is born anew.


A Chieftain is dead. And whilst the events surrounding his death are unclear, a son tries to come to terms with his loss.

[Writing] Why did Éowyn ask Faramir if he'd rather have a "woman of the race of Númenor"? by Quente

For most of my life, when reading Lord of the Rings, I read it through the perspective of Gandalf's words about Éowyn, that she'd spent years trapped as a caregiver, watching the realm she love fall from honor into disgrace.


But what if Éowyn was also a student of history? 


…

Around the World and Web

Week of Kiliel
A Tumblr event dedicated to the relationship between Kili and Tauriel.

Aspec Arda Week 2026
This week-long event celebrates asexual and aromantic spectrum interpretations and headcanons of Tolkien’s Legendarium.

Angbang Week 2026
Angbang Week is a tumblr event focusing on the relationship between Morgoth and Sauron, running from May 5-11, 2026

April/May Teitho Challenge
Teithio is running a prompt challenge around the theme of "heartbreak."

Tolkien Reverse Summer Bang 2026
The Tolkien Reverse Summer Bang is back for another summer of collaboration between artists and writers!

View all Around the World and Web announcements.

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Tolkien Fanworks Scholarship Bibliography by Dawn Felagund  

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Fanwork Notes

The Tolkien fandom is one of the oldest and most prolific fanworks-producing fandoms. The first documented Tolkien fanworks began appearing in the late 1950s, and since then, the fandom has produced hundreds of thousands of fanworks, largely fanfiction and fanart. Despite this, Tolkien-based fanworks and the communities that create them have received very little study compared to fandoms of a similar size and longevity. To wit, there are entire volumes on fanworks that do not mention Tolkien fanworks even once. This is a loss for the fan studies field, as the Tolkien fandom has cultural features that distinguish it from other fandoms that have received more study—and thus have shaped (misshaped?) the field's understanding of fanworks.

However, there has been fan studies work done that focuses on Tolkien-based fanworks, and this collection aims to highlight that work. I will include scholarly work that 1) focuses on Tolkien-based fanworks (of any kind) and 2) is available for free online. (If you have access to an academic library and want a broader list, see the list of scholarship on Fanlore here.) Much of the work in this area has been done by independent scholars, so I am defining "scholarship" as anything published in an edited or peer-reviewed publication or presented at a conference.

Please comment if you know of a work that fits the criteria above that I have not included. I do have copies of many works on this subject that are not available online; please message me if you're looking for a print article or chapter that you haven't been able to find. Works are listed alphabetically by title.

Fanwork Information

Summary:

This collection includes links to online open-access scholarship about Tolkien-based fanworks.

Major Characters:

Major Relationships:

Genre: Reference Collection

Challenges:

Rating: Creator Chooses Not to Rate

Warnings: Creator Chooses Not to Warn

Posted on 11 June 2022 Updated on 6 July 2022

This fanwork is a work in progress.

"Affirmational and Transformational Values and Practices in the Tolkien Fanfiction Community" by Dawn Walls-Thumma

Fanfiction scholars tend to assume that fanfiction serves a "transformational" purpose, intentionally writing against the canon to foreground the reader's/viewer's own experiences. This paper makes the case that Tolkien fanfiction—which is produced by an understudied fan community—shows that authors have a much more complex relationship with the canon, at times subverting it but also studying it, collecting it, and celebrating it through their fanworks. Using 2015 Tolkien Fanfiction Survey data, I further show that the communities Tolkien fanfiction writers built are often undergirded by these ideas about the appropriate role of canon in fanworks.

"Attainable Vistas: Historical Bias in Tolkien's Legendarium as a Motive for Transformative Fanworks" by Dawn Walls-Thumma

In this article I take a two-pronged approach, first exploring the evidence for historical bias in Tolkien's books. Next, I make the case that this bias serves as an impetus for some—though not all—authors to explore characters, using data from the 2015 Tolkien Fanfiction Survey to show that, among some fan communities, characters who receive negative bias receive increased attention from fanfiction writers.

"Constructing Lothiriel: Rewriting and Rescuing the Women of Middle-Earth from the Margins" by Karen Viars and Cate Coker

After a review of the scholarship on women characters and fanfiction, Viars and Coker make the case that most writers place Lothiriel in the role of a romance heroine, navigating the roles of men and women in society, primarily in the domestic sphere.

"Deconstructing Durin’s Day: Science, Scientific Fan Fiction, and the Fan-Scholar" by Kristine Larsen

Kristine Larsen makes the case that attempts by fans to elucidate the scientific underpinnings of aspects of the legendarium, such as Durin's Day, are a form of fanwork and further expand the scientific knowledge of the creator and his/her/their audience.

"Diving into the Lacuna: Fan Studies, Methodologies, and Mending the Gaps" by Dawn Walls-Thumma

In this creative essay, I argue that fan studies scholars have largely ignored Tolkien fanfiction because they don't know what to do with us. This lack—and the perception of a lack is part of what drives the creation of fanworks—ultimately inspired my work on the Tolkien Fanfiction Survey.

"J.R.R. Tolkien, Fanfiction, and 'The Freedom of the Reader'" by Megan B. Abrahamson

Initially published in Mythlore in 2013 and the recipient of the Mythcon student paper award that year, Abrahamson makes the case for the legitimacy of fanfiction by drawing comparisons with Tolkien's own creative method and "theory of story" presented in texts like "On Fairy Stories."

"'Oh ... oh ... Frodo!': Readings of Male Intimacy in The Lord of the Rings" by Anna Smol

One of the defining scholarly works about homosexual relationships in Tolkien's work, this article focuses on the relationship between Sam and Frodo and includes discussion of the fan response to how their characters are often read as queer.

"Reimagining Rose: Portrayals of Tolkien's Rosie Cotton in Twenty-First Century Fan Fiction" by Amy Sturgis

According to Sturgis, the "incomplete portrait of Rosie Cotton drawn by Tolkien now serves as a challenge to the burgeoning world of Tolkien fan fiction." Sturgis considers the many mechanisms by which fanfiction writers draw Rosie into their stories: as a capable partner to Sam, as a participant in a open relationship that includes Frodo, and as a supernatural AU character. The article also covers fanfiction where Rosie is rejected in order to make room for a partnership between Sam and Frodo.

"Thrusts in the Dark: Slashers' Queer Practices" by Robin Anne Reid

Reid argues for understanding slash as a phenomenon that transcends understanding gender and sexual identity on a binary, an area understudied in the scholarship. Reid also considers darkfic in opposition to the more traditional understanding of slash fiction as romance fiction. You can request a copy of the article at the link above.

"Under the Waterfall: A Fanfiction Community’s Analysis of their Self-Representation and Peer Review" by Kristi Lee Brobeck

Included in the book The Democratic Genre by Sheenagh Pugh—considered one of the inaugural works in fanfiction studies—Brobeck's article analyzes how members of the erstwhile Henneth Annûn Story Archive (HASA) viewed the site and in particular its review system.


image of a bleeding and frowning red-haired elf with his arms raised above himself

Artano

1 year 4 months ago

Permalink

Thank you for gathering all…

Thank you for gathering all these in one place; this is a fascinating collection of articles, and I am curious to read them more in-depth and learn more about the Tolkien fan community!

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