Follow Me: Religion in Fantasy and Science Fiction
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Follow Me: Religion in Fantasy and Science Fiction is the seventh Call for Papers of Academia Lunare, the non-fiction arm of Luna Press Publishing.
The papers focus on the theme of religion in fantasy and science fiction, in all its forms, in di
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Book preview
Follow Me - Francesca T Barbini
ACADEMIA LUNARE
Call For Papers 2022
Follow Me.
Religion in
Fantasy and Science Fiction
Edited By
Francesca T Barbini
Introduction © Francesca T Barbini 2023
Articles © is with each individual author 2023
Cover Design © Francesca T Barbini 2023
Cover Image: The Singer of Amun Nany’s Funerary Papyrus - Book of the Dead
First published by Luna Press Publishing, Edinburgh, 2023
Follow Me. Religion in Fantasy and Science Fiction © 2021. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopy, recording or otherwise, without prior written permission of the copyright owners. Nor can it be circulated in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without similar condition including this condition being imposed on a subsequent purchaser.
www.lunapresspublishing.com
ISBN-13: 978-1-915556-19-6
Academia Lunare CfPs Series
Gender Identity and Sexuality in Fantasy and Science Fiction (2017)
Winner of the British Fantasy Society Awards
1 Article Shortlisted for the BSFA Awards
2 Article Nominated for the BSFA Awards
The Evolution of African Fantasy and Science Fiction (2018)
Shortlisted for the British Fantasy Society Awards
2 Article Nominated for the BSFA Awards
A Shadow Within: Evil in Fantasy and Science Fiction (2019)
Nominated for the BSFA Awards
Ties that Bind: Love in Fantasy and Science Fiction (2020)
Shortlisted for the BSFA Awards
Worlds Apart: Worldbuilding in Fantasy and Science Fiction (2021)
Winner of the British Science Fiction Awards
Shortlisted for the British Fantasy Society Awards
Not the Fellowship. Dragons Welcome! (2022)
Nominated for the British Science Fiction Awards
Introduction - Francesca T Barbini
Humanity has been interested in answering the Big Questions of life since the beginning, and still is. Why are we here? What happens after we die? Are humans a magnificent coincidence or a divine creation? Launching a call on Religion in SFF was a way of glimpsing how SFF writers have been incorporating their views on religion into their writings, knowingly or unconsciously.
Religion
seems to mean different things to different people. Although it generally involves ways to link humans to something transcendental, spiritual, or supernatural, there is no consensus on a fixed definition. Moreover, religion can be analysed through a broad variety of disciplines, such as theology, philosophy, comparative and social scientific studies. When I opened this call last year, I specifically did not specify the angle, as I like to be surprised by what contributors want to offer to the conversation. This is also a characteristic of Luna’s CfPs, that of encouraging cross-disciplinary collaboration among contributors.
The ten papers in this year’s edition are, as always with this series, varied, as we invited authors to tackle the topic from different angles to create an array of paths for leading the reader to the focussed theme. The papers are grouped in three sections.
We begin our journey in J.R.R. Tolkien’s Legendarium, looking for Eru Ilúvatar (Sassanelli) and the relation of neo-pagans to the Ainur pantheon (Whaba), before looking at religion in Tolkien’s own life, through the Inklings (Coundjeris). Oscar Wilde’s The Happy Prince is the protagonist of aestheticism vs Christianity (Stevenson), concluding this section.
We then move on to toxic religion in the utopian and cultural worlds of Africa in the works of David Coleman and Nuzo Onoh (Bacon), followed by the Egyptian gods of Zelazny (Bianchini), for whom religion has played an important role in his writings. The second section ends with a look at queer gods from history (Morgan).
The final section is led in by the videogame Final Fantasy X, where Girardian theory make us re-evaluate the anti-religious rhetoric that has accompanied this game and its sequels since their release. The last two articles examine afterlife through virtual reality (Kirkbride), UFO religions, and alien messiahs with Arthur C. Clarke (Cooney).
I hope you enjoy them.
Who Is Eru?
Literary, ethical, and theological reflections about God and Religion in Tolkien’s Middle-earth - Ivano Sassanelli
Abstract
Who is Eru/Ilúvatar? Where is God in The Lord of the Rings? What kind of relationship is there in Tolkien’s works between Fate and Free Will or Doom and Providence? This essay tries to answer to these questions highlighting Tolkien’s philological studies on Beowulf and his letters. This kind of analysis is essential to understand the Eru’s narrative presence in The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings, particularly in the last part of Tolkien’s masterpiece in which Mount Doom is the real protagonist.
Introduction
Over the years within the studies on Tolkien’s works, scholars have deepened the reflection on the religious and philosophical-theological themes (Coutras, 2016; Halsall, 2020). In this context, a question has become increasingly evident: Where is God
within the narrative of the tales about Middle-earth? (Pezzini, 2019).
The answers to this question can be varied. For example, someone could say that God is not present in Arda and there is no explicit trace of Him. Or that even if He were there, He would still be extremely remote and, therefore, would little affect the events of Arda, especially in the Third Age in which there are no cults and religions. Or that God is a simple Immobile Engine that, narratively speaking, had only the task of starting all things, disappearing and having no longer any other role within Middle-earth (except in very special and exceptional cases).
Therefore, following these hypothetical answers, one could not—or almost always not—trace a link between the narration
and the presence of Eru
(or in general of the divine
) in the events of Arda. This, in Tolkien’s tales based essentially on the relationship between language and literature (Shippey, 2005; Flieger, 2012), would mean that, both in The Hobbit and in The Lord of the Rings, there would be no words or concepts capable of expressing God in terms of both a philological-logopoietic study and a literary-mythopoietic aspect and, therefore, in a narrative story.
However the question to ask is whether all this corresponds to the truth or not. This essay will try to provide a solution not comparable to those highlighted above.
1. Eru in Tolkien’s letters
The first step is to investigate how the Professor thought of Eru in the context of his Legendarium. What interests us to analyse here is not the development of the events narrated in the First and Second Ages but the ratio underlying the figure of the One, Ilúvatar, in the construction of Tolkien’s Secondary World. For these reasons we will not refer to the stories of the Music of the Ainur and the Silmarillion but we will dwell on what the Professor said about these topics in some of his letters published and edited by Humphrey Carpenter under the supervision of Christopher Tolkien.
In the Third Age of Middle-earth, it was a monotheistic world of natural theology
(Tolkien, 2017, p.220). This means that, within Tolkien’s conception of the history of Arda, there is a transcendent God
: the One, Eru-Ilúvatar. In fact, the One does not physically reside anywhere in Arda and is extremely remote (Flieger, 2002).
However, this does not mean that the One was an indifferent and immobile God, sitting on his throne of heavenly glory. He gave the themes to the Ainur to develop them through their Music and, moreover, with his Eä
(Let it be!
), initiated the Creation, thus becoming the Guarantor of the Free Will of his creatures.
On the other hand, Tolkien has repeatedly emphasized that Eru reserved for Himself the supreme authority to intervene, to show the finger of God
in the history of Arda. Actually, He modified and introduced new themes—such as the creation of his Sons to counter the dissonance caused by Melkor—and, ultimately, performed what the Professor called miracles
. This happened both in the episode of the Fall of Númenor and in the desire to ennoble the human race in the cases of Lúthien and Túor.
However, Eru’s intervention was not limited to the great tales and mythological deeds of ancient times: it became present also in the Third Age. The Authority that ordained the Rules
, the Other Power
, the Writer of the Story
, the one ever-present Person who is never absent and never named
, Eru had also set to work in the events concerning Bilbo, Frodo, the Free Peoples of Middle-earth and the Ring of Power.
2. The Hobbit: between adventures and prophecies beyond mere luck
For the purposes of our reflection on the presence and role of Eru in the events of the Third Age of Middle-earth, we will not analyse the origin and plot of The Hobbit but we will dwell only on the ending of this story that sheds new light on what happened to Bilbo Baggins. Actually, in the last chapter of this book, we read:
Then the prophecies of the old songs have turned out to be true, after a fashion!
said Bilbo. Of course!
said Gandalf. You don’t really suppose, do you, that all your adventures and escapes were managed by mere luck, just for your sole benefits? You are a very fine person, Mr. Baggins, and I am very fond of you; but you are only quite a little fellow in a wide world after all!
Thank goodness!
said Bilbo laughing, and handed him the tobacco-jar. (Tolkien, 2011, p.276)
This last scene of The Hobbit is fundamental for our reflection and for the understanding of its entire sequel, The Lord of the Rings. Words, expressions, and concepts that are used in these lines will come in handy when we will analyse the adventures of Frodo and the Fellowship of the Ring. First of all, it should be noted that Gandalf used the expression mere luck
to designate what Bilbo’s escapes
had not been on that trip from Bag End to Lonely Mountain.
To better understand this passage, we must refer to another Tolkien’s work: Beowulf: the Monsters and the Critics (2006b). In this academic essay the word luck
is recalled at least twice. In fact, firstly, it is written that: Beowulf only twice explicitly thanks God or acknowledges His help. […] Usually he makes no such references. He ascribes his conquest of the nicors to luck
(Tolkien, 2006b, p.40). Secondly, in an explanatory note, we read: "The most Christian poets refer to wyrd, usually of unfortunate events; but sometimes of good […] There remains always the main mass of the workings of Providence (Metod) which are inscrutable, and for practical purposes dealt with as ‘fate’ or ‘luck’" (Tolkien, 2006b, p.47).
Tolkien, in the last lines of The Hobbit, through the words of Gandalf, who within Tolkien’s mythology is a Maia with the function of guardian angel, wanted to tell Bilbo—but also all readers—that behind the apparent randomness of the events, adventures, and escapes of the protagonists of this story, there had not been mere luck
but something else much greater, more powerful, and wider that went beyond the short range of Bilbo’s view.
Therefore, in this story, through these simple words and through the connection between the adventures of Bilbo and the prophecies of the old songs
, Tolkien wanted to say that what might seem mere luck
is in fact a wider dimension, a broader providential plan open to a higher Power. All this inserted Bilbo, a little fellow
of a remote Shire of Middle-earth, into a wide world
.
And it is precisely from here that, a few years later, the Professor restarted the stories of these exceptional Hobbits, told in The Lord of the Rings, in a great adventure contained in the pages of Red Book of Westmarch.
3. The Lord of the Rings and the Hobbits guided by grace and Providence
In the previous section we mentioned how it is possible to trace a link between what Gandalf said to Bilbo at Bag End after the adventures at Lonely Mountain and the dialogue between the Gray Pilgrim and Frodo many years later. It is now essential to understand this link better and more deeply.
In this context, the words that Tolkien wrote in letter no. 281 of 15 December 1965, addressed to Rayner Unwin concerning the preparation of an economic edition of The Hobbit, are illuminating:
Hobbits were a breed of which the chief physical mark was their stature; and the chief characteristic of their temper was the almost total eradication of any dormant ‘spark’, only about one per mil had any trace of it. Bilbo was specially selected by the authority and insight of Gandalf as abnormal: he had a good share of hobbit virtues: shrewd sense, generosity, patience and fortitude, and also a strong ‘spark’ yet unkindled. […] This is clear in The Lord of the Rings; but it is present, if veiled, in The Hobbit from the beginning, and is alluded to in Gandalf’s last words. (Tolkien, 2017, p.365)
In our opinion, this text has a fundamental importance for all the arguments we will make later. What we have previously seen about The Hobbit—namely the fact that the events of Bilbo had not been mere luck
but that there was something else or someone else behind them—is found this time in an explicit and declared way in The Lord of the Rings.
Actually, in chapter II, called The Shadow of the Past, what happened many years before between Gandalf and Bilbo is recalled. The place was always Bag End. This was spoken and explained once again by Gandalf. The topic of conversation was again Bilbo’s adventures and in particular his encounter with Gollum and the Ring in the caves of the Misty Mountains. However, the interlocutor changed: not Bilbo but Frodo. In this chapter Gandalf says:
‘There was more than one power at work, Frodo. The Ring was trying to get back to its master. […] Behind that there was something else at work, beyond any design of the Ring-maker. I can put it no plainer than by saying that Bilbo was meant to find the Ring, and not by its maker. In which case you also were meant to have it. And that may be an encouraging thought.’ ‘It is not,’ said Frodo. (Tolkien, 2005, pp.55-56)
From this text it is clearly visible that Tolkien pointed out several times that in Bilbo’s adventures there had been more than one power at work
. Actually, behind those events were: Sauron, who was desperately looking for the Ring. The Valar, who had sent the Istari to Middle-earth to counter the power of the Dark Lord of Mordor. Saruman, who wanted to become a Power and a Ring-maker like Sauron. Finally, the most important Power of all, Eru, which was that something else at work
, the Authority who, thanks also to Gandalf’s help, chose Bilbo
and now was asking Frodo to take part in a new and ancient adventure at the same time (Tolkien, 2017, p.320).
It is also interesting to note that, precisely in this context, during the conversation between Frodo and Gandalf, Tolkien highlighted the word meant
with italics that is intended
, thought
, wanted with intention
. So both Bilbo and Frodo had been wanted, and therefore thought, in the mind of that something else
(or someone else
) who was at work to find the Ring (in the case of Bilbo) and take it to Mount Doom (in the case of Frodo).
So, these few lines explain what Gandalf said to Bilbo when he had ruled out the possibility that the adventures of the hobbit