speaking of (and on an adjacent note), you guys know Art of the Title (evocative, memorable, and full of info scent too) right?? ...my all-time favorite here, is def Mad Men! http://www.artofthetitle.com/
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Replying to @smc90 @michael_nielsen
OMG this is so good!!!! (Also I forgot to mention that LOTR trailer also drove me insane --- and they were all like 1 year teases.... You cannot legally do that to people!!!)https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dz4e6rnIvTM …
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Replying to @TheAnnaGat @smc90
Oh, yes! I can't resist saying: the first 3 minutes of "The Two Towers" are amongst my favourite in all cinema. They brought alive something that Tolkien had just barely hinted at in the books.
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Wut One of the reasons (to me) Tolkien is interesting+so good at what he does is precisely that he only gives glimpses in LOTR at the depth he develops in the Silmarillion+elsewhere. . . The movies were acceptable (a compliment). Battle scene at Helm's deep was awesome, though
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michael_nielsen Retweeted michael_nielsen
One of my favourite examples of this is Tolkien's brief use of the phrase "the cats of Queen Beruthiel" in Moria: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Queen_Ber%C3%BAthiel … His essay on the phenomenon of subcreation has had a large influence on my life:https://twitter.com/michael_nielsen/status/673176819965759489 …
michael_nielsen added,
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Replying to @michael_nielsen @C4COMPUTATION and
Not just because of the connection to UI design, of course! But rather his essay describes a way of understanding story, and how we understand the world.
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This is marvelous. Ofc beyond fiction there's a sinister tinge to it: how immensely flexible our minds are to enter, accept and internalise any story that looks coherent - that seems to provide info on how to lead out lives and what to think - and then exist in it.
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One of the things I took from that Tolkien essay is some of the difference between story & myth. It's exaggerated and too blunt, but roughly: a culture has a plethora of stories; myths, by contrast, have cultures.
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I think this link is broken: http://www.mundusimaginalis.org/insights/perennial-philosophy-traditionalism/the-subcreation-theory-of-j-r-r-tolkien/ … …
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The original essay is: http://brainstorm-services.com/wcu-2004/fairystories-tolkien.pdf … (That commentary had some interesting bits, but wasn't as good, of course. As can be deduced from the use of "Tolkein" etc.)
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I first read it as part of two-part collection called "Tree and Leaf": https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tree_and_Leaf … The other part is an allegorical short story "Leaf by Niggle". Tolkien famously claimed to dislike allegory, but it's clearly on display in that story; and it works.
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