This book reveals the unique contribution made by the three founding fathers of British fantasy—Lord Dunsany, E. R. Eddison and J. R. R. Tolkien—to our culture’s perennial reassessment of the meanings of time, death and eternity. It traces the poetic, philosophical and theological roots of the striking preoccupation with mortality and temporality that defines the imagined worlds of early fantasy fiction, and gives both the form of such fiction and its ideas the attention they deserve. Dunsany, Eddison and Tolkien raise some of the oldest questions in existence: about the limits of nature, human and divine; cosmic creation and destruction; the immortality conferred by art and memory; and the paradoxes and uncertainties generated by the universal experience of transience, the fear of annihilation and the desire for transcendence. But they respond to those questions by means of thought experiments that have no precedent in modern literary history.
Author(s): Anna Vaninskaya
Edition: 1st Edition
Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan
Year: 2020
Language: English
Pages: VIII, 262
Tags: Literature, Fiction, Literary Theory, Genre
Front Matter ....Pages i-viii
Introduction: The Game of Life and Death (Anna Vaninskaya)....Pages 1-22
Lord Dunsany: The Conquering Hours (Anna Vaninskaya)....Pages 23-67
E. R. Eddison: Bearing Witness to the Eternal (Anna Vaninskaya)....Pages 69-151
J. R. R. Tolkien: More Than Memory (Anna Vaninskaya)....Pages 153-228
Envoi (Anna Vaninskaya)....Pages 229-231
Back Matter ....Pages 233-262