this post was submitted on 01 Feb 2026
11 points (86.7% liked)
Tolkien, Lord of the Rings (LotR), etc.
1588 readers
42 users here now

For all things Tolkien, Lord of The Rings (LotR), and The Hobbit across all media. Speak friend and enter.
Rules:
- No abusive language
- No buying, selling or advertising
- Be civil
- No politics
- No discussions about race
- No bots
- No memes or AI-generated content
- Don't criticize others for their opinions
- If you found the image on the web, it is encouraged to put the direct link to the image in the ‘Link’ field when creating a post, instead of uploading the image to Lemmy. Direct links usually end in .jpg, .png, etc.
- No unrelated posts
- No spoilers in title, mark spoilers
- Let people like what they like
- Follow all Lemmy.world rules
Please report any rule violations.
founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
I don't think escaping the trauma was his intention, not when his books deal so intimately with the corrosive effects of power. I think he was processing the trauma by telling a story that describes the feeling of those traumatic events, and tries to make sense of how regular people can talk themselves into such senseless violence. I think it's fair to describe that as coping, but I don't think his cope was just ignoring it by describing a nice door for 10 pages. I also don't think it's really fair to say he just wanted "a" story to go with his fancy languages. He had a real point about what evil is, and he wanted to tell it in a story.