Lessons in Abnegation by elfscribe  

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Fanwork Notes

Fanwork Information

Summary:

Guided by their tutor, Prince Eldarion and his friend learn that the choice to seize or reject the Ring's power is not an easy one.
 

Canon Source: History of Middle-earth, Letters of J.R.R. Tolkien, Lord of the Rings

Major Characters: Eldarion, Original Character(s), Original Male Character(s), Original Female Character(s)

Major Relationships:

Genre: Drama, Nonfiction/Meta

Challenges:

Rating: General

Warnings:

Chapters: 1 Word Count: 2, 188
Posted on Updated on

This fanwork is complete.


Comments on Lessons in Abnegation

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I thoroughly enjoyed meeting these youngsters and watching them work through thier arguments with their tutor. And the way you link Sauron to the bomb, it gave me a sense that when that wind blew his dark cloud away, it actually scattered around the world in a kind of nuclear fallout, influencing the generations and Ages to come... 

Thank you, Anerea! I’m glad you enjoyed the boys’ argument, meant to encapsulate the issue of using the power of the Ring to protect their lands and people from Sauron’s evil vs all the frightening unintended consequences that its use would have, linked of course to similar considerations made by Pande’s paper about lunatic physicists and abnegation. In the course of writing this, I realized how much Tolkien’s image of Sauron’s threatening cloud stretching out its impotent hand towards Gondor actually bore a frightening resemblance to an exploding atomic bomb. I know Tolkien said the Ring was not an allegory about the bomb and indeed in many ways the analogy doesn’t fit, but one wonders how intentional that image may have been on Tolkien’s part, even if subconsciously. RotK was written after the bombs were dropped on Japan in 1945 and the UK first tested their own bomb in 1952 before LotR’s publication. His comments about abnegation of the use of atomic power in letter 185 are worth reading. We could only wish that in our world, as in LoTR, that specter was now gone forever.  Thank you so much for all your work on the Mereth Aderthad. The zine design is gorgeous and I can’t wait to get my copy! 

It is easy to leap to conclusions, especially for the less experienced, but their teacher makes them really think it through.

I like all three of your characters, but especially Meril!