Tolkien's Problem with Dune

Фильм және анимация

Check out www.squarespace.com/jessofthe... to save 10% off your first purchase of a website or domain using code jessoftheshire
Tolkien didn't like Dune...but why? And why do so many Lord of the Rings fans adore it?
Support me on Patreon: patreon.com/user?u=83474753
Donate to my tip jar: ko-fi.com/parttimehobbit12870
Follow me on Instagram: / jess_of_the_shire
Contact me: jess.of.the.shire.business@gmail.com
Music by Epidemic Sound. Check out my referral link here: share.epidemicsound.com/yz6hu0

Пікірлер: 5 100

  • @philiptaylor7902
    @philiptaylor7902Ай бұрын

    I suspect that Tolkien as a deeply spiritual and religious person was appalled by Herbert’s profound cynicism with regard to religion in Dune, treating it as nothing more than a way of manipulating and controlling the masses. Although there is no trace of any formal religion in Tolkien’s world it is “charged with the grandeur of God” as Hopkins would have it.

  • @sebastianevangelista4921

    @sebastianevangelista4921

    Ай бұрын

    Yeah Middle-Earth is basically catholicism with Elves haha. Tolkien had his biases and they bled into his work for sure!

  • @fluffynator6222

    @fluffynator6222

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@sebastianevangelista4921 There certainly are worse ways it could have gone tho. A religiously zealous route instead of the hopeful optimism trying to redeem even the worst. I think that's a nice message regardless of one's spirituality.

  • @emmitstewart1921

    @emmitstewart1921

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@sebastianevangelista4921Yes Herbert is very cynical about religion. There are two forms of religion in Dune. There is the Zensunni faith, which is clearly a Muslim sect modified by Buddhist influences. This religion has clearly been deliberately twisted for selfish reasons by the Bene Gesserit propaganda branch, who injected a prophecy about A mythical Mahdi and his Bene Gesserit mother Then there is the faith followed by the most of the Galaxy, as expressed by the Orange Catholic Bible. This religion is not really explained in any of the Dune books except for the tenet that the human mind is sacred and that any device that attempts to duplicate it or its functions is a blasphemy and strictly forbidden. Apparently modifying the human mind to duplicate the functions of a computer is perfectly all right. I can see why a devout Catholic like Tolkien would be repelled by both of these "religions" where God and his love appear to be totally absent. Dune is not fantasy. It is purely science fiction. There is no magic, no wonder, and the battle of good vs evil is entirely lacking. The Atreides use kindness to insure the loyalty of their followers just as the Harkonnens use cruelty to insure the obedience of theirs. Both are only too willing to expend any or all of their followers in the struggle for power. It is a fascinating world, but one which Tolkien would despise as godless and morally barren.

  • @8ahau279

    @8ahau279

    Ай бұрын

    Is Dune really cynical, though? It's certainly very serious and not really optimistic, but it doesn't feel cynical to me, the way something like Warhammer 40k is.

  • @pickthestickup

    @pickthestickup

    Ай бұрын

    This is it. This is the answer to why.

  • @ChristopherDazey
    @ChristopherDazeyАй бұрын

    Also, Anakin Skywalker was not a big Dune fan.

  • @sebastianevangelista4921

    @sebastianevangelista4921

    Ай бұрын

    I FUCKING KNEW THIS JOKE WOULD SHOW UP!!!

  • @laurenbernstein621

    @laurenbernstein621

    Ай бұрын

    🤣🤣🤣

  • @Jess_of_the_Shire

    @Jess_of_the_Shire

    Ай бұрын

    it's a really coarse, rough story.

  • @sebastianevangelista4921

    @sebastianevangelista4921

    Ай бұрын

    @@Jess_of_the_Shire And it gets everywhere on the internet.

  • @Incoming1983

    @Incoming1983

    Ай бұрын

    yeah he got burned

  • @smashdriven1640
    @smashdriven1640Ай бұрын

    I like how she holds that cup the whole time but never drinks out of it.

  • @KeldorDAntrell

    @KeldorDAntrell

    Ай бұрын

    I don't. She's a bad actress with 'conceited phoney' stamped all over her.

  • @LR11306

    @LR11306

    Ай бұрын

    Probably did take sips but cut it out in the editing.

  • @marcogomez2736

    @marcogomez2736

    Ай бұрын

    It may not be her cup of tea

  • @CrisisghostOM

    @CrisisghostOM

    Ай бұрын

    I consider this spoilers 😠

  • @AcornFox

    @AcornFox

    Ай бұрын

    bro is unaware of video editing

  • @christopherlansdowne1295
    @christopherlansdowne1295Ай бұрын

    I think there is a missing link between Tolkien and Herbert that has value being explored; author Michael Moorcock. I would say in many ways Tolkien was an author of an earlier time of classic certainties and reassurances that evil will always be its own undoing. Herbert was an author that in many ways was re-telling the story of 'The New World' (the spice trade, the influence of other nations and religion on a different land) but with many of the more jaded mindset that was relevant in the Americas. Then there was Michael Moorcock, who was a major force in the sci-fi and fantasy world of the 60's and 70's that updated and flipped many of the genre escapist stories and turned them on their head. Moorcock himself met and spent time with Tolkien, and though respected he has voiced his opinion of how he found fault with Tolkien's classic trope of "trust the old man who knows best" way of thinking that was rather traditionally English for the time. I honestly believe if there was an Elric of Melniboné series of movies (which there absolutely could be), he would sit close enough between these two stories to value being spoken about. And the fact that he is not spoken about more is a failing of literature.

  • @agatazietek9098

    @agatazietek9098

    Ай бұрын

    Interesting, is he more in the idealist or cynical way of writing, or something in between?

  • @peterk2735

    @peterk2735

    Ай бұрын

    The other writer you can look to from that era is Philip Jose Farmer. But if you want an in-depth sociological analysis on mankind both in a fantasy and a sci-fi setting, that’s Ursula Le Guin. She’s one of the all time greats and her books have absolutely influenced my worldview

  • @FakeStrangepie

    @FakeStrangepie

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@agatazietek9098Probably somewhere in between. Elric, the protagonist of Moorcock's most famous series, is profoundly selfish, somewhat evil (he has a moral compass but often ends up choosing to do awful things and being haunted by them afterwards) and spends much of his time chasing relatively petty grudges to the edge of the world and past it. At the same time, he ends up saving his local environs and eventually the world at large over and over, electing to do his duty even though it means he and everyone he cares about will die and be forgotten. He is an incarnation of the Champion Eternal, an archetype central to Moorcock's stories that is always fated to live a miserable life but also to bring balance between the equally destructive forces of Law and Chaos. When Law dominates, it eventually destroys everything and creates an empty void since that is easiest to govern, and Chaos victory results in a broiling mess where change occurs for the sake of change, ultimately resulting in a different kind of stagnation. As a result, Moorcock clearly departs from both Tolkien's good-evil dichotomy and Herbert's view of an uncaring universe. For Moorcock that latter is actually desirable, as humans becoming able to develop free of the influence of both Law and Chaos is one of the few unquestionable positives in his universe.

  • @lampyrisnoctiluca9904

    @lampyrisnoctiluca9904

    Ай бұрын

    What I love about Elric is that he was a type of character you would normally see as a villain. Guy who knows the difference between the good and evil, wants to be good, but always succumbs down. The difference from an antihero is his complete lack of the qualities those guys posses. He is not a bully that does something good proving there is a good in him. He is a nerd who then turns into a bully while still hating bullies and wanting the revenge upon them. He starts full of himself, thinking he is a way better person than he really is. Then it slowly transforms into self loathing once he realises who he really is. The best written morally gray character I had a chance to read about.

  • @michealjennings4374

    @michealjennings4374

    Ай бұрын

    Heh you said moorcock

  • @clerns
    @clernsАй бұрын

    Well Tolkien was more of a spider guy than a worm guy.

  • @Nefylym

    @Nefylym

    Ай бұрын

    I mean .... it really is that simple. lol

  • @cecilcharlesofficial

    @cecilcharlesofficial

    Ай бұрын

    [Smaug enters the chat]

  • @philipkane9393

    @philipkane9393

    Ай бұрын

    Funny!

  • @ElectricalExistence

    @ElectricalExistence

    Ай бұрын

    i liked dune, until i found out what the writer of it was and his ending to the tale. basically space jews fly off into the galaxy to start a new civilization after leto reigns as the worm god. its f'ing cringe and the whole story is kinda lame and full of communist, woke nods even for its time. its not a good story.

  • @FlymanMS

    @FlymanMS

    Ай бұрын

    @@ElectricalExistence your comment tells not a good story about you

  • @jimbombadill
    @jimbombadillАй бұрын

    well to be honest, Dune is realy dry...

  • @matthewwinans3068

    @matthewwinans3068

    Ай бұрын

    🤦‍♂️

  • @henrythemuthafuckineighth

    @henrythemuthafuckineighth

    Ай бұрын

    **Buh dum tss** 🥁🥁🥁

  • @matthew7849

    @matthew7849

    Ай бұрын

    I said it once and I'll say it again, Jim, you are one slippery son of a bitch and your gumption is only surpassed by your moxie. Now get the hell out of here.

  • @tarmaque

    @tarmaque

    Ай бұрын

    I felt dirty upvoting that spicy take...

  • @M4TCH3SM4L0N3

    @M4TCH3SM4L0N3

    Ай бұрын

    Boooooo hisssssss 😕

  • @TotalyRandomUsername
    @TotalyRandomUsernameАй бұрын

    When i was 14 and strolling around i literally found a book laying beside some rubble written "Dune" on it. I just picked it up to read it later. And so began my life long love for science fiction. :)

  • @Annapurna818

    @Annapurna818

    18 күн бұрын

    That is how I found Interview with the Vampire on the floor of a department store that was going out of business.

  • @anniebot_45-73
    @anniebot_45-73Ай бұрын

    i love how polite he was about not liking it. it's like shorthand for "it's not my cup of tea, but i shan't elaborate further lest my own view on the matter corrodes those of others who may otherwise find great entertainment from within its pages. my writing philosophy is: when you're inspired to write a specific scene, or a specific event, a specific anything, do it. just write. don't worry about plot or pacing, don't worry about spelling or grammar, doon't worry about anything other than what is happening on the scene. a story is made from a book, a book is made from a world, a world is made from events, events are made from scenes. to create your world, you must first create your scene. find that lynchpin that the whole story rests on, and remove it. examine it closely, explore every groove, every chip, every crevice. know your story through this pin. let it be your eye into another world, and use it to carve out the destiny you seek for the characters you write about. to build a world, you must first put things in it. let there be light.

  • @justinw1765

    @justinw1765

    25 күн бұрын

    It was a mature and respectful approach. Sometimes it is the better part of wisdom to remain silent.

  • @DaintyBroom2233

    @DaintyBroom2233

    22 күн бұрын

    Exactly, I feel that from alot of people that love Dune will villianize Tolkien for not liking Dune, when Tolkien literally had the most polite responce about not liking it ever. He didn't go into depths trashing it or saying it was horrible literature, just that he personally didn't like it, which is WELL within his rights.

  • @tijnvannelmen5832

    @tijnvannelmen5832

    10 күн бұрын

    doon't

  • @vmlinuxz
    @vmlinuxzАй бұрын

    Tolkien was correct in saying that he could not be a good critic as a competitor, and that was not his role or place. That was truly the best take, because he knew he would be unfairly biased.

  • @TylerWardhaha

    @TylerWardhaha

    Ай бұрын

    I think that the competitor reason is a polite excuse. They obviously had vastly different philosophies and I think Tolkien didn’t want to go there. I think competitors are often the ones who appreciate each others skills the most. I think that breaks down in this case because the skill in question is putting each of their personal philosophies into a book. That’s just my personal take on it.

  • @Lilliathi

    @Lilliathi

    Ай бұрын

    @@TylerWardhaha It wouldn't have mattered what he'd argued, people would have said he was just slandering a rival. He was in the wrong position to criticize.

  • @TylerWardhaha

    @TylerWardhaha

    Ай бұрын

    @@Lilliathipresupposing that others wouldn’t bother to hear his reasoning but rather dismiss it outright seems a strong assumption to me. Obviously there are people who are biased and won’t hear an argument out, but assuming those are the people Tolkien is worried reacting seems a bit of a stretch. Due to his position as an influential writer Tolkien is in possibly the best position a writer could hope to be in when it comes to people being willing to hear him out.

  • @Lilliathi

    @Lilliathi

    Ай бұрын

    @@TylerWardhaha I didn't say everyone would dismiss him. Yes, him being a successful writer is a good position to criticize from, but not this "rival" book. Doing so would risk his reputation.

  • @exumbra1399

    @exumbra1399

    Ай бұрын

    There's also the fact that ANYTHING he said negative about Dune might unfairly damage Herbert's rep and sales. Even if Tolkien didn't like it, he doesn't need to bias his own readers against another author.

  • @MarlinMay
    @MarlinMayАй бұрын

    My take goes as follows. Tolkien was a devout Christian. The very idea of breeding a Messiah would have shocked him to his very core, perhaps even disgusted him. The supernatural doesn't exists in the universe of Dune. No god in the sky, no angelic beings, no multitude of spirits. Every fantastic thing that happens is the result of hard work by humans with no assistance or intervention from beings on high. Dune is materialistic. The Dune saga is about looking forward towards a perilous future. Tolkien's legendarium is about looking back at a golden age. The world of Dune is grounded in technology. >Everyone I am not at all surprised he hated Dune.

  • @lunatickoala

    @lunatickoala

    Ай бұрын

    Not just that but the Fremen religion in Dune was propaganda used for control. Tolkien believed legends and myths were "largely made of truth" in that they are the means by which a deeper truth can be unveiled. For a myth, a religion, to be explicitly stated to be a lie used for manipulation, and for the people propagating those lies to be the "heroes" would have been as you say shocking and disgusting to Tolkien.

  • @Lucien86

    @Lucien86

    Ай бұрын

    You obviously read a different version of dune to the one I read. It is full of magic and the spiritual and religion. The spice itself is essentially magical in its properties. I think it is more that many of the ideas in Dune are extremely blasphemous to Christianity.. Like you said creating-breeding your own messiah.

  • @heiniknallkopp9688

    @heiniknallkopp9688

    Ай бұрын

    @@Lucien86Spice is in no way magical. One day, it might be possible to extend life as we see fit and the human mind still is full of secrets and mysteries for us to discover. Regarding religion, i think what religious people might hate the most here is, that Herbert went the logical way and _evolved_ the different Religions, which will happen anyway. Your typical for example muslim expects that his world view and beliefs will never change and always stay relevant, because thats what he was told from childhood on, backed up by holy scripture, but then, there is this Frank Herbert guy, writing a science fiction book, where Islam is combined with buddistic concepts and philosophy of all things. Shocking! Blasmephous! Same goes for christians. I cant remember how Herbert described it, bu basically, christianity also changes drastically over time. Shocking! Blasphemous!

  • @jonathonpolk3592

    @jonathonpolk3592

    Ай бұрын

    ​@Lucien86 the "magic" in Dune wasn't magical. All of it was achieved by mental disciplines, genetic engineering, and chemical stimulation. For example, the Bene Gesserit mental compulsions were vocal techniques that essentially hypnotized people into compliance. All of Paul's abilities were derived from having knowledge of one's past lives, which allowed him to fully see the past and foresee how possible futures could unfold based on knowledge of the past. Everything else was explained by technological or mind altering effects from the spice. It may have seemed like magic, but it was not supernatural. As for religion, Dune represents a cynical view of it. It was portrayed as a powerful framework that could drive followers to achieve what many would think to be impossible, but it was also ultimately portrayed as illusory, something fake used by the powerful to control the masses. That's exactly what Paul did, which is why he isn't really a hero despite being the protagonist. It was also shown to be dangerous rather than benign, as even charismatic leaders who use religion can lose control over the masses. This is why Paul struggled with guilt in the second book: because he could not stop the Jyhad once he overthrew the Emperor. If he tried, he would have been martyred and the Fremen would have continued their campaign in his name. And all of this came about because of the power of the Fremen's faith in him and in their religion.

  • @calistafalcontail

    @calistafalcontail

    Ай бұрын

    The Bene Gesserit and their powers are kinda supernatural/spiritual. Their training is inspired by practises that are meant to attain spiritual powers in several religions. They also mention souls. Souls are part of the spiritual realm....and having visions or prophetic dreams is also something. Engineering a messiah actually reminds me of the antichrist prophecy. Something/someone who will appear like a saviour and fulfills almost all the foretold criteria but is a deception by the powerful to lead people away from God. And didnt the author say that Baron Harkonnen was meant to be the embodiment of the 7 deadly sins? Btw.....sky and heaven are 2 different things. I dont know a single person whos into theology and spirituality who says the geographical sky is were God is.

  • @LoganGalt8810
    @LoganGalt8810Ай бұрын

    I can't thank you enough for an actually well thought-out, detailed and well considered video, instead of rage-bait drama. Subscribed.

  • @tripounoutripounou334

    @tripounoutripounou334

    Ай бұрын

    Oh yes…Amen to that !…just a cup of tea and a polite discussion…and if we are not agree..that’s fiiiiine…have some scones Folks !…Thanks a lot !….Subscribed too

  • @zagrizena
    @zagrizenaАй бұрын

    If I remember correctly, Tolkien strongly disliked modern technology - he hated cars and machines and even used industrialisation and technology as a way to portray destruction in LOTR. And he was devoutly Catholic. There's hardly any wonder he would practically hate a story, rooted entirely in materialism and focused so much on technological advances.

  • @heatherbukowski2102

    @heatherbukowski2102

    Ай бұрын

    The Dune universe doesn't like technology either... it even banned the use of things like computers (anything that seems to mimic the human mind, if I remember correctly).

  • @EpicCorn0

    @EpicCorn0

    28 күн бұрын

    @@heatherbukowski2102 That's really just computers though. There's a lot of other technological advances, like the huge spaceships that fold space around them, ornithopters, etc. It's just computers that are banned and looked down upon, not technology in general.

  • @justinw1765

    @justinw1765

    25 күн бұрын

    @@EpicCorn0 More succinctly, AI was banned. Everything else, including advanced genetic manipulation, was fair game.

  • @terraincognita9614

    @terraincognita9614

    6 күн бұрын

    I get what you’re saying but Dune has a lot of warnings about technology too

  • @gregoryblack8109

    @gregoryblack8109

    6 күн бұрын

    Tolkien was not against sci fi as he was friends with Arthur C Clarke

  • @Capjedi
    @CapjediАй бұрын

    Love the angle! Yes, J.R.R. Tolkien was very particular, and spiritually minded. However, he was a huge fan of trees! In Dune, there are no trees! How can one write a fantasy without the beauty of trees? I'm sure that was it.

  • @williamchamberlain2263

    @williamchamberlain2263

    Ай бұрын

    :)

  • @TheCelestialhealer

    @TheCelestialhealer

    Ай бұрын

    😉

  • @exomake_mehorololo

    @exomake_mehorololo

    Ай бұрын

    He hates sand

  • @linjie1213

    @linjie1213

    Ай бұрын

    It's coarse, and rough, and irritating, and it gets everywhere. 🤪

  • @carlosmenchon7242

    @carlosmenchon7242

    Ай бұрын

    This makes sense

  • @Rochambo
    @RochamboАй бұрын

    I know in my brain LOTRs was published in ‘54 but my heart has a hard time coming to terms with the fact that Tolkien and Herbert were contemporaries. It’s like how Dali and Picasso lived far into the 1900’s… just doesn’t compute lol

  • @Jess_of_the_Shire

    @Jess_of_the_Shire

    Ай бұрын

    Totally agree! It's astonishing how quickly LotR became a modern myth.

  • @TimelyAbyss

    @TimelyAbyss

    Ай бұрын

    @@Jess_of_the_Shireexactly what Tolkien dreamed of.

  • @Wintermute01001

    @Wintermute01001

    Ай бұрын

    Fun fact: Dali was in TV commercials for Alka-seltzer

  • @jawbone78

    @jawbone78

    Ай бұрын

    I'm always confused by people confused about Dali and Picasso living in the 1900s. Their work could only have been from the 20th century. It would be way, way weirder if their work existed in the 19th century or earlier. (That's not an attack on anyone, I'm just honestly baffled that people see these quintessential 20th century artists as anything else.)

  • @K.C-2049

    @K.C-2049

    Ай бұрын

    I mean it kind of makes sense though doesn't it? I think you could definitely look at these two texts as really emblematic examples of pre and post WW2/nuclear age/Cold War literature. I tend to think of pre and post WW2 society as almost totally different ages as well. PLUS Tolkien explores a world that is thematically and materially more "historical" looking, where Herbert is looking way way forward. it's easy to conflate the huge difference between settings in the books with the context of their writing.

  • @iamreaperd
    @iamreaperdАй бұрын

    Thank you for not actually spoiling anything! It is so hard to find Dune analysis videos that don't go all the way to the end.

  • @klic001
    @klic001Ай бұрын

    Congratulations on the 100k, here's to 200k. Excellent framing and pacing, I only wish you'd allude to some of the philosophical outcomes of their perspectives. Keep up the great work.

  • @HeyDadLetsPlay
    @HeyDadLetsPlayАй бұрын

    Not enough trees.

  • @Lectrikfro

    @Lectrikfro

    Ай бұрын

    It's hard to write 3 pages describing the land scape when all you can see is an ocean of sand

  • @hadeseye2297

    @hadeseye2297

    Ай бұрын

    God Emperor of Dune. ;)

  • @Bruhsaurus-Moment

    @Bruhsaurus-Moment

    Ай бұрын

    -7.8/10 Too much sand

  • @Notsogoodguitarguy

    @Notsogoodguitarguy

    Ай бұрын

    @@Bruhsaurus-Moment yeah, gets everywhere.

  • @jacobstaten2366

    @jacobstaten2366

    Ай бұрын

    Read all 6 books. There are plenty. They even turn a polluted planet back into an inhabitable one.

  • @Jump3RPictur3s
    @Jump3RPictur3sАй бұрын

    Tolkien wanted what all fantasy writers want - to have their readers dream. Herbert wanted what all science fiction writers want - to warn their readers. Neither is inherently better or worse, right or wrong, both serve their intended purpose... and the fact that both these men used so many similar elements and techniques throughout their biggest works shows that they are indeed good stories made by great storytellers... Only one question remains: which effect you are in the mood for :)

  • @johnnyhunter3869

    @johnnyhunter3869

    Ай бұрын

    I'd strongly disagree that science fiction is about warning your readers. It can just as well be the dream of an interesting and promising future. Just because modern sentiment sometimes has trouble having a positive outlook doesn't have to mean it's a truth of some kind.

  • @Jump3RPictur3s

    @Jump3RPictur3s

    Ай бұрын

    @@johnnyhunter3869 science itself has its foundation in dreaming of better ways, which makes dreamy stories easy and expectable. Bland and unimaginative. Good scifi story uses science to be the basis of a dream, but the fiction is a basis of grounding that dream, anchoring the reader. It's easy for humans to dream sometimes, harder to accept risks of reality, sci fi explores those risks and even with best of intentions and best possible outcomes it's not as compelling of a story unless you juxtapose the dangers posed by taking the dream too far. It was an obvious simplification for comparison sake on my part in the original comment, of course there is nuance and science themes can be used in lighthearted way or with a mean to show positive possibilities and improvements, but that's not fiction - that's just how it is IRL all the time. That's not as fun. If you want only the good parts then you can just read ads and marketing documents...

  • @johnnyhunter3869

    @johnnyhunter3869

    Ай бұрын

    @@Jump3RPictur3s I simply too umbrage with the simplification. Things are always more interesting when they are complex, but to ascribe depression as a centerpoint to a genre that may just as easily focus on the more positively themed struggle against the potential dangers the future holds.

  • @Jump3RPictur3s

    @Jump3RPictur3s

    Ай бұрын

    @@johnnyhunter3869 absolutely, good dialogue and storytelling demand complexity, you could not be more right about that my friend... however warnings and cautionery tales and risk assessment doesn't mean depression by default... it is often correlated in most popular works, to some extent, and if not depression then we can observe other states of concern for alertness... all of which are very human aspects everyone struggles or struggled with at least once in their life... taking them to extremes with convenience, comfort and compliance are effective recipies for compelling scifi storytelling and worldbuilding because humans are very easily self-destructive like that. Just look at our vast history. And I did not say anything about negative or positive notions of "warnings" and "dreams", you jumped to that conclusion on your own, which is a bit biased if you ask me. Personally I struggle with dreams being positive things only and warnings or caution being something bad or to be frowned upon, to me they always were the opposite - dreams are the danger, and warnings are what keeps you alive.

  • @hinasakukimi

    @hinasakukimi

    Ай бұрын

    i mean sci fi and fantasy can have a lot of overlap

  • @jeremysundahl6123
    @jeremysundahl6123Ай бұрын

    You have a truly wonderful way with words and the format and execution of this video is refreshing, intelligent, and charming. You create a warm and comfortable atmosphere for thoughts around the subject, and I really appreciate the time you put in to create that. Keep up the good work.

  • @michaelgauthier2593
    @michaelgauthier2593Ай бұрын

    I just want to compliment your articulative capabilities, you have such a relaxed yet deeply thoughtful and informed delivery, feels so much more conversational than most KZread deep dives. Thoroughly enjoyed this analysis!

  • @ericvicaria8648
    @ericvicaria8648Ай бұрын

    Why do I love both LOTR and Dune, even though neither is perfect? They both take their audience seriously. Both authors assume we will care deeply about their ideas as they do, and they each worked as hard as possible to make their ideas interesting.

  • @buckmoonmedia5113

    @buckmoonmedia5113

    Ай бұрын

    In a lot of ways, they're really 2 sides of the same coin. Dune has all the shades of grey where Lord of the Rings feels more black and white in their themes, just to start

  • @rakino4418

    @rakino4418

    Ай бұрын

    See also Gene Wolfe

  • @downtostandup

    @downtostandup

    Ай бұрын

    Tolkien was just mad he didn't come up with Dune

  • @MH-il1lk

    @MH-il1lk

    Ай бұрын

    "They both take their audience seriously." This is why Disney has failed huge recently.

  • @tomigun5180

    @tomigun5180

    Ай бұрын

    @@MH-il1lk Oh they take their IMAGINARY 🤡 "modern audiences" quite seriously!

  • @shlazzargh
    @shlazzarghАй бұрын

    I think that one of the commonalities that make me love both Dune and LOTR is that both hint at a much wider universe than what is actually written in the pages. You get a sense that there are vast sweeps of time -- both forward and backward -- and they help enrich the story even if there are not any specifics. So many authors try to specify or canonize their entire world that those worlds feel smaller and less inhabitable.

  • @ahums16

    @ahums16

    Ай бұрын

    It's a major, major secret ingredient.

  • @BiscuitMan14

    @BiscuitMan14

    Ай бұрын

    Have you ever read Malazan Book of the Fallen? By your description, it sounds like you would love it.

  • @KeytarArgonian

    @KeytarArgonian

    Ай бұрын

    If you like this feeling I highly recommend Foundation by Isaac Asimov. It’s criticised for not having great characterisation, but once you realise the characters are nothing but vessels to tell the greater story as time jumps between short stories/chapters it grows into a larger tale on a galactic scale and long term time frame.

  • @markrutledge5855

    @markrutledge5855

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@KeytarArgonianBut only the original trilogy. The following books lost the original magic.

  • @mr.e7541

    @mr.e7541

    Ай бұрын

    Yes one that you can put yourself into. I always kind of thought of that too but never understood it until you said it. Like Harry Potter there's a hint that there's more going on there is other characters you could follow and you can self insert yourself into it

  • @lindseycaldwell9559
    @lindseycaldwell9559Ай бұрын

    I wasn't expecting to cry during this video, but I got a little misty-eyed during the spiel about love and honor being special because while you were saying that I was thinking about the way Tolkien talks about friendship and the combination of the two hit me in the feels.

  • @barrymaher3922
    @barrymaher3922Ай бұрын

    Very well thought out and executed video. Loved that it was all content without memes or effects. Thanks for this.

  • @TrollsFormers05
    @TrollsFormers05Ай бұрын

    I imagine the reason he didn’t like Dune is the same reason he wouldn’t like ASOIAF if he had lived to read it: it’s very cynical and almost hopeless. Nothing is really redeemed.

  • @RestingJudge

    @RestingJudge

    Ай бұрын

    I feel like Tolkien had some Augustinian pessimism, the world's declining but there's hope at the end. Whereas ASOIAF is extremely nihilistic. I would say there's hope in Dune, but there's so much suffering you wonder if it's really worth it in the end.

  • @dylanc9174

    @dylanc9174

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@RestingJudge Tolkien may have been conflicted personally, but we know in his work the universe is just an orchestral display for Illuvitar. Of course for some melodies to rise others must fall in volume. Tolkien likely wanted to write a story of after the elves left, but found it depressing. He also unfortunately is not immortal, so he was not able to finish his works (if he ever would have finished them, or only expanded).

  • @K.C-2049

    @K.C-2049

    Ай бұрын

    @@RestingJudgeit seems to me that with LOTR despite the changes in age and the rise and fall of different people in Middle Earth, there's an overarcing and immutable morality of light vs. dark, good vs. evil. Dune and ASOIAF strike me as FAR too morally grey and, as you say, nihilistic for Tolkien.

  • @RestingJudge

    @RestingJudge

    Ай бұрын

    @dylanc9174 I think it can come across as being conflicted, and we humans are, to a certain degree, on many things. Tolkien's ideas of decline and hope are actually extremely consistent with the Catholic tradition, though. If you're familiar with Augustine's City of God, and Tolkien most certainly was, it demonstrates these ideas to their fullest religious context. I think a story after the elves leaving would evoke too much of where Tolkien saw the world going, more industrialization, exploitation, and the end of simple hobbit life. It's probably too depressing for Tolkien to continuously reflect on. Still hope would be there, but focusing on the eclipse makes it seem like the sun will never shine in a sense.

  • @RestingJudge

    @RestingJudge

    Ай бұрын

    @K.C-2049 yeah, I don't think Tolkien would've been a big fan of the ends justifying the means in Dune. In regards to ASOIAF he would've been disgusted with it's nihilism, but the work isn't finished so he'd probably hold his tongue until there was an actual end to the story.

  • @ViRoseLaBianca
    @ViRoseLaBiancaАй бұрын

    “Tolkien didn’t like cars” why did I immediately think you meant the Pixar film? Timeline issues assign, that was a funny visual.

  • @Jess_of_the_Shire

    @Jess_of_the_Shire

    Ай бұрын

    It's cannon--Tolkien would have despised Lightning McQueen

  • @quakethedoombringer

    @quakethedoombringer

    Ай бұрын

    @@Jess_of_the_Shire"kachow, Elfman" - Lightning Mcqueen

  • @elfascisto6549

    @elfascisto6549

    Ай бұрын

    Timestamp ?

  • @donkeysaurusrex7881

    @donkeysaurusrex7881

    Ай бұрын

    He wasn’t a fan of Disney either iirc so that’s probably a safe assumption.

  • @jwr6796

    @jwr6796

    Ай бұрын

    Haha same. I have a 4yo though...

  • @frogsplusdogs2271
    @frogsplusdogs2271Ай бұрын

    This video was so Impressive! I turned it on in the background like I do with many video essays but this one is so quality that it caught my attention. The analogy about apples and oranges was perfect.

  • @sugoistalin7809
    @sugoistalin7809Ай бұрын

    Tolkien hated a lot of things, he created multiple work of art but taking his opinions as gospel is ridiculous.

  • @user-bh5kq5ue3r

    @user-bh5kq5ue3r

    24 күн бұрын

    i see my bae sugar boo stalin, i like the comment

  • @oscarstainton
    @oscarstaintonАй бұрын

    As far as I know, the only contemporary genre writer’s work Tolkien enjoyed was Robert E. Howard’s Conan the Barbarian books. Its a shame that Howard died quite young and the two never had chance to meet, with a smoke and mug of ale in hand.

  • @lukecox6317

    @lukecox6317

    Ай бұрын

    The architects of High Fantasy and Heroic Fantasy / Sword and Sorcery!

  • @JazzGuitarScrapbook

    @JazzGuitarScrapbook

    Ай бұрын

    I vaguely remember he said he quite enjoyed Asimov and Clarke?

  • @twincast2005

    @twincast2005

    Ай бұрын

    He liked Asimov's Foundation.

  • @Jess_of_the_Shire

    @Jess_of_the_Shire

    Ай бұрын

    Holly Ordway's Tolkien's Modern Reading discusses a lot of the stuff that he read, and he definitely did enjoy some modern authors. It's been a minute since I read the book, but I remember it being quite educational.

  • @joncarroll2040

    @joncarroll2040

    Ай бұрын

    This is overblown. At most Tolkien probably read one Conan story that was sent to him in a collection by either Lin Carter or L Sprague DeCamp and in the letter he sent back he vaguely said he sort of liked one but whether that was the singular Conan story or one of the others. DeCamp or Carter then started making out that Tolkien was a huge fan to boost sales of their own versions of the Conan books which were coming out at that time (as if the Frazetta covers weren't enough).

  • @ViRoseLaBianca
    @ViRoseLaBiancaАй бұрын

    I first read On Fairy Stories as a teenager. Almost two decades later, I still cry every single time Tolkien talks about the value of escape. It speaks to me on a level I cannot describe. The feeling of “wanting to get out and go home” lives inside me and has only ever been spoken to or seen through fantasy.

  • @Jess_of_the_Shire

    @Jess_of_the_Shire

    Ай бұрын

    On Fairy Stories truly is a gift.

  • @williamchamberlain2263

    @williamchamberlain2263

    Ай бұрын

    True, but unfortunately the fugue keeps playing, so the escape can't be forever and people have to keep getting back and climbing the rigging to out-sail the storms

  • @Tartersauce101

    @Tartersauce101

    Ай бұрын

    For him tho, it wasn't fantasy. Catholics literally call conversion 'going home' like if you find KZread vids of people that convert to Catholicism check the comments people will be saying 'welcome home'. I think the Catholic Church has the best claim to Truth I've seen...something to consider.

  • @joannemoore3976

    @joannemoore3976

    Ай бұрын

    The part on eucatastrophe made me tear up. It's that illumination on the edge of understanding that lights Tolkien's work.

  • @michaellong5714

    @michaellong5714

    Ай бұрын

    It was reading Tolkien's explanation of eucatastrophe that hit home for me more than reading The Hobbit, then Lord of the Rings. I understood immediately what it meant...to me, and it encouraged me to continue reading more of his works, or at least the parts that Christopher Tolkien and others have compiled. I had always wanted to know or maybe had a hint of understanding of why I felt the way I did with certain stories, how they were constructed, how I felt when that 'turn' came, and why they touched me deeply in certain ways, and reading On Fairy Stories was the key to help me accept and understand why I had those feelings.

  • @alexanderalza7964
    @alexanderalza7964Ай бұрын

    Just discovered your videos a few days back, really enjoying them, keep up the great work Jess! 💪

  • @r.e.tucker3223
    @r.e.tucker3223Ай бұрын

    Well thought-out, detailed, and well done Possibly the best compare/contrast of the topic I have seen. Thank you.

  • @TransRoofKorean
    @TransRoofKoreanАй бұрын

    FWIW I _love_ the name Duncan Idaho, because it actually makes perfect sense: in the distant future, who knows which names from history will be remembered, which ones people fill find intriguing and exotic and interesting. It seems like such an absurd name today, or 60 years ago, but I think it's that contrast of "absurd today" versus "maybe they would a thousand years from now" that makes it interesting.

  • @zargonofb

    @zargonofb

    Ай бұрын

    Have you watched The Postman? There's a character born after the apocalypse by the name Ford Lincoln Mercury. Yet stranger: people are still alive who remember those words from the signs in front of car dealerships.

  • @n0tthemessiah

    @n0tthemessiah

    Ай бұрын

    It's like if you went back to the 1600s and told them one of the 20th Century's most popular action/adventure heroes is named Indiana Jones. I'm sure their response would be nearly the same as our is to 'Duncan Idaho'.

  • @TransRoofKorean

    @TransRoofKorean

    Ай бұрын

    @@zargonofb Yeah, I do, although the first thing I think of was more of a joke, the character named (the alien who chose the name) "Ford Prefect"

  • @BrandanLee

    @BrandanLee

    Ай бұрын

    Oswald in 2024, is a name for nerds. Ásvaldr in 900, was the name of kings and warriors.

  • @annacastro2855

    @annacastro2855

    Ай бұрын

    Duncan Idaho is a great name. I, however, refuse to believe that the jesus of year 10,191 would be named 'Paul' 😂 at least, not unless Christianity had persisted in some capacity, and I can't remember if that's the case. 'Jessica' is another name that I find out of place, at least for a main character. I think that some common names could survive into the far future, but having the two most common names used for the most central characters feels more plainly like Herbert trying to make the protagonists accessible to people of his time. After all, immigrants with the name 'Jose' were changing it to 'Joe' back then, people were a little sheltered lol (and some still are).

  • @mrgallbladder
    @mrgallbladderАй бұрын

    It reminds me of how Mark Twain disliked Jane Austen's works. It seems inconceivable as both are extraordinarily beloved authors, but people are different and they can like and dislike things for their own reasons.

  • @waltergold3457

    @waltergold3457

    Ай бұрын

    Except that Twain's reasons were the right ones. 🙂 Read his two essays on James Fenimore Cooper - apart from Twain's confusion about the size of riverboats in Cooper's day, it's probably the best and funniest literary criticism put to paper.

  • @vs6584

    @vs6584

    Ай бұрын

    @@waltergold3457 Mark Twain the granddaddy of men forcing their unasked for opinions on literature and art made by and for women

  • @waltergold3457

    @waltergold3457

    Ай бұрын

    @@vs6584 Twain did say he feared the "crinoline in the camp." 🙂

  • @exomake_mehorololo

    @exomake_mehorololo

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@waltergold3457did he have traumatic experiences with crinolines?

  • @alcibiadesW

    @alcibiadesW

    Ай бұрын

    @@vs6584 And how fortunate we are that women never treat men that way.

  • @ericjohnson8847
    @ericjohnson8847Ай бұрын

    Just found your channel. Looks like a lot of cool videos. I've subscribed and excited to go back and watch your previous videos! Congrats on 100k!

  • @rhinoreselling414
    @rhinoreselling414Ай бұрын

    I’ve been watching your videos a while now and really enjoying them. I like the little personal blurb at the end. Real emotion is always good for KZread algorithm

  • @GoatOfTheMountains
    @GoatOfTheMountainsАй бұрын

    Duncan Idaho is a great name. The universe runs on Duncan.

  • @billberndtson

    @billberndtson

    Ай бұрын

    The books can be read in a way to confirm this.🙂

  • @user-kr7zh9sk8x

    @user-kr7zh9sk8x

    Ай бұрын

    OOOOOH, that's so bad it's AWESOME!

  • @johnbayer9795

    @johnbayer9795

    Ай бұрын

    "Duncan" is an ordinary male name, found incidentally among the Kings of Scots. I couldn't figure out the "Idaho" part, though: Why would a guy millennia hence bear the name of a less-peopled Western US state--unless his ancestors held a related title (as in "Prince Elector of Idaho")? It *has* given me a smidgeon of inspiration, though, imagining a character with a Celtic first name coupled with another US state's....

  • @ragingtomato04

    @ragingtomato04

    Ай бұрын

    Well originally Denis V. adaptation is named after Duncan 😂

  • @abhirupd2231

    @abhirupd2231

    Ай бұрын

    There 45 different cool names and all of them are spent on Paul. So the rest gets names like Duncan Idaho.

  • @dwdei8815
    @dwdei8815Ай бұрын

    Universe twist - turns out the worms are the Ent-wives.

  • @mattmcneely8271

    @mattmcneely8271

    Ай бұрын

    Oh my! What in the world happened to them?! How did they become worms? And how tf did they come to be on Arrakis!? Could be interesting. You'd better start writing...

  • @tonysladky8925

    @tonysladky8925

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@mattmcneely8271I assume the same way Leto II became a worm...

  • @pvp72

    @pvp72

    Ай бұрын

    😂

  • @coledelong427

    @coledelong427

    Ай бұрын

    @@mattmcneely8271they all asked the ents if they would still love them if they were worms

  • @Tom_Quixote

    @Tom_Quixote

    Ай бұрын

    "She looked better without the filters"

  • @zombiekiller3510
    @zombiekiller3510Ай бұрын

    I just discovered your Channel with this vidéo. Great work ! Keep it up !

  • @Omerta2times
    @Omerta2timesАй бұрын

    Just found the channel. Always happy to see more discussion on Tolkien. Super sweet!

  • @MiamiMarkYT
    @MiamiMarkYTАй бұрын

    As a big fan of both Dune and LOTR, what I enjoy about both books is their rich and enthralling universes first and foremost. The lore is not only deep and detailed but magnetic as well. It captures my mind and pulls me into the world so much that I cannot help but want to stay there well after it’s time to go. Likewise the characters have tremendous depth to them that makes them feel truly alive. The departures in tones, themes, and ideals could not be larger between the two, and if outlook had to be placed on a spectrum, Herbert and Tolkien would find themselves on opposite ends. But I think it is perfectly rational for a reader to enjoy two works of opposite theme and tone. We are not one-dimensional people after all. One day we are vibrant romantics and the next we may be jaded cynics. And with nearly the entire world in our pockets now 24/7, it is easier than ever to have something radically change our prospectives in a flash. It’s no surprise then that many people can swing wildly from being boundless optimists lauding the heroic and virtuous good triumphing against daunting evils to gritty pessimists who want to read about their flawed protagonists stumble just as we do. Books and film are escapism at the end of the day, but we want to escape from changes constantly, so it only makes sense our forms of escape would change constantly as well.

  • @zaq_hack4987

    @zaq_hack4987

    Ай бұрын

    I agree on the world building. The books that I revisit, that I remember well, that I cherish years after the fact are great stories told upon a detailed stage. Would I like John Wick if there was no Continental? No place to spend the gold coins? Probably. Would I love it? Would I have been eager for more chapters? Not really. It's the WORLD that pulls you in ... And so it is with Middle Earth that has been fertile ground for Dungeons & Dragons and videogames and more. People love to be immersed in it. Tolkien told us many stories from the place, and we loved them both: The stories AND the place. And Dune fills our imaginations in similar ways. How to travel through space? How to occupy such alien worlds? How to live without smart machines ... on purpose. The set pieces are different from Middle Earth, but it still calls to us to explore outside the pages and between the lines. It awakens our imaginations with a little spice ...

  • @KeldorDAntrell

    @KeldorDAntrell

    Ай бұрын

    You almost made me want to re-read Dune with your first paragraph. Then, for me, you started to prattle. How can a person swing from being a jaded cynic one day to a vibrant romantic on another? Maybe someone with a very short memory, perhaps. You argue that it is easier now than ever to have something radically change our perspectives in a flash. It seems to me that anyone who is like that must live a very confused life struggling to know who they are and how to make sense of the world if they are so easily changed. Lastly, "at the end of the day" books and film are *only* escapism if one wants them just for that. To dismiss the educational potential of books and films like this just cannot go without correction.

  • @Allan_aka_RocKITEman
    @Allan_aka_RocKITEmanАй бұрын

    *Sauron: **_The Rings must flooooow...."_* *Baron Harkonnen: **_He who controls the Rings, controls the universe!_* 🤭🤭🤭 {Great video, Jess...👍}

  • @TheCBoysDotCom

    @TheCBoysDotCom

    Ай бұрын

    Very Halo-adjacent lmao

  • @Rick_-ej3xq
    @Rick_-ej3xqАй бұрын

    I love your content ma’am! You’re very well spoken and informative❤ will be back to watch ur next videos

  • @thisrandomdude2846
    @thisrandomdude2846Ай бұрын

    What a wonderful video!! You're pretty darn good at this hahahah, and I hope you only continue to improve. This was a really interesting video to watch, and I'm always glad to find out more about the philosophy of writing. :)

  • @DevinParker
    @DevinParkerАй бұрын

    J.R.R. Tolkien's work resonates with my soul. I love the beauty of Middle-earth, the sense of history and grandeur, and the music of its languages. As a Christian, Tolkien's "wholly Catholic" conception of Middle-earth's spirituality has always comforted me, and Sam and Frodo's love for each other and dedication to their quest to save friends and community from Evil inspires and refreshes me. As an artist and an ex-vangelical, the melancholy of the Elves is something I increasingly find I can relate to as I get older and as I watch the institutions I was raised to respect erode and darken with greed, power-lust, and hatred, while the toll industry has taken on nature now threatens everything. Dune appeals to me because it's a science fiction world that is massive in scale and yet focused in its telling upon a political, commercial and religious struggle that doesn't become dull or tedious. It presents a setting that's both strange and familiar, becoming in a sense timeless. The skepticism it holds toward power structures and their rulers' machinations that manipulate and exploit powerless people has proven applicable to what we see play out in our own governments and corporations again and again. And, more recently, with the rush of tech corporations to embrace generative AI despite its origins in massive art theft and ambitions of automating creative jobs (forcing artists to seek paying work in office drudgery or manual labor), I find myself increasingly sympathetic to the Butlerian Jihad. I go to the two stories to draw different things from them. But there are a few points of similarity where both resonate with me. Obviously, both present lush, flavorful worlds that are different from our own and yet remain very believable, and in that I find beauty and boundless cleverness. They both tell epic, sweeping chronicles, which is great fun. But additionally, despite Tolkien's inclusion of powerful characters like Aragorn and Gandalf, those characters appeal because they have humble origins and lofty principles they actually emulate rather than merely pretending to. Aragorn and Gandalf have for me the same appeal as Superman: the fantasy that someone with so much power could still be a genuinely good person. They confront corrupted power structures, from Sauron and Saruman, Wormtongue and Denethor, to Ted Sandyman, and restore justice. And the true heroes of the story, the ones who save everyone, are the little folk who are barely known of even by their neighbors and who have no pretensions to importance. Despite the romance of divine powers and kingly lineages, Tolkien's distrust of hierarchies of power still comes through his "fairy-stories." Where Herbert reminds us what the reality of our world is and how important the ecology of things is to our continued survival, Tolkien reminds us that holding on to hope and demonstrating compassion aren't foolish or in vain. They both acknowledge the existence of corruption and deal with what the temptations of power does to people. While Dune doesn't necessarily offer the hope and emotional uplifting of Tolkien's eucatastrophe, I think I benefit from having the skeptical education that Herbert encourages, too. Both are beneficial to living in the real world.

  • @aymonfoxc1442

    @aymonfoxc1442

    Ай бұрын

    Good analysis. You're quite right; both bring a unique perspective and teach similar but distinct lessons. Regardless, we cannot escape the similarities in narrative storytelling and messaging. The two compliment each other quite well.

  • @ViennaGuy2000

    @ViennaGuy2000

    Ай бұрын

    TL; DR: both Arwen and Chani are hot in their own ways. JK: good analysis, interesting opinion

  • @thisrandomdude2846

    @thisrandomdude2846

    Ай бұрын

    Absolutely banger comment, that was genuinely so nice to read and well-written :)

  • @jay_rod_sweeter

    @jay_rod_sweeter

    Ай бұрын

    "Wholly Catholic perception"..... lmao 😂 dudes entire book is based on the Pagan Norse Mythology 😂😂😂!!!!

  • @maxdenby2166

    @maxdenby2166

    Ай бұрын

    Good comment 👍👍

  • @MaestroGradius
    @MaestroGradiusАй бұрын

    LOR lovers who are DUNE lovers simply like good stories; rich stories; rich characterization; vivid settings; and wisdom from the characters.

  • @jub7345

    @jub7345

    Ай бұрын

    Dune is bad

  • @dawudmc

    @dawudmc

    Ай бұрын

    @@jub7345 because you say so, or because you only saw the movie and didn´t like it?

  • @manuelcb1960

    @manuelcb1960

    Ай бұрын

    basically

  • @superhetoric

    @superhetoric

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@jub7345how many entries in the series have you read?

  • @davidhehir7378

    @davidhehir7378

    Ай бұрын

    @@jub7345want to elaborate or are you just going to say it’s weird because you never read the books?

  • @edmundhack6673
    @edmundhack6673Ай бұрын

    One nit. From what I remember, LOTR wasn't really a serious academic subject until the 1970s. A professor was cajoled into teaching a course about it by my roommate in 1974 or so. The professor (a specialist in medieval literature) went on to set up academic conferences and published a lot of papers delving into LOTR and the Silmarillion and their connections to Tolkien's academic work.

  • @pantherapardus1398
    @pantherapardus13988 күн бұрын

    I think most people are forgetting a rather crucial part of Tolkien's life that heavily influenced his outlook on life and perhaps offer a reason as to why he disliked Dune. WW1. His time in the trenches and the traumatic events inflicted upon him there more than likely would have led him to become even more grounded in his beliefs as they, along perhaps with his wife and children, may have given hope for the future and helped him cope with whqtever trauma-related issues he may or may not have been struggling with. So upon reading Dune, perhaps he found it's more somber and morose tone to be too cynical, jaded and defeatist in regards to life and humanity itself as he would've experienced first-hand the worst of what men could do to each other and yet throughout his life, expressed countless times throughout his works, he always had hope. At least, as far we know he did.

  • @scottthomas3792
    @scottthomas3792Ай бұрын

    I read both " Dune" and " The Lord of the Rings" as a teenager in the '70s...during the " eternal winter" of 1976-'77...as you said, they're both good stories. Since we lived in a semi rural area at the time, the Lord of the Rings was a little more relatable....

  • @azazelazel

    @azazelazel

    Ай бұрын

    It's funny you say that, because as an Australian I would imagine Dune would be more relatable to rural people haha.

  • @Elamado97

    @Elamado97

    Ай бұрын

    No, Dune is about big kingdoms and treasure, how is that relatable to rural people. What's more "relatable" is how a small creature from a small village changes the fate of the world.​@@azazelazel

  • @johnbayer9795

    @johnbayer9795

    Ай бұрын

    That's when I started on it!

  • @benhmn

    @benhmn

    Ай бұрын

    Wow. Did you see Star Wars that summer then? That would be a hell of a year for escapism and art.

  • @scottthomas3792

    @scottthomas3792

    Ай бұрын

    @@benhmn Yes, I saw Star Wars that summer....it came out right before school let out ...late May or early June, if I'm not mistaken...

  • @eymerichinquisitore9022
    @eymerichinquisitore9022Ай бұрын

    I loved the entire Dune series but when I learned that Herbert in '83 didn't allow Iron Maiden to use the title Dune for a song they dedicated to his novel because he didn't like rock, I was disappointed by such close-mindedness.

  • @arrow2589

    @arrow2589

    Ай бұрын

    I mean, he was also a massive homophobe, even against his son. Not surprising rock music was too much for him

  • @TheWhiteWolf2077

    @TheWhiteWolf2077

    Ай бұрын

    Why are authors such haters my god.

  • @names_are_useless

    @names_are_useless

    Ай бұрын

    I believe I remember reading Tolkien hated Led Zeppelin's Music, even though they were constantly making reference to his works. That's just how it goes. I can't find the exact quote, but I did find this one: > In addition in a house three doors away dwells a member of a group of young men who are evidently aiming to turn themselves into a Beatle Group. On days when it falls to his turn to have a practice session the noise is indescribable..... And this: > I read eagerly all details of your [Christopher's] life, and the things you see and do - and suffer, Jive and Boogie-Woogie among them. You will have no heart-tug at losing that (for it is essentially vulgar, music corrupted by the mechanism, echoing in dreary unnourished heads). So yeah, he didn't like Jazz, Rock, etc. Ah well.

  • @tomigun5180

    @tomigun5180

    Ай бұрын

    @@arrow2589 There's no such thing, it's just a smear word of the weak ignorant leftists.

  • @Valkbg

    @Valkbg

    Ай бұрын

    Do you like everything in this world?

  • @jean3304
    @jean330428 күн бұрын

    Thank you for this very clever and interesting analysis. The optimism in Tolkien's work, which allows us to escape into a world full of beauty and wonders, as you explain it so well, is why I will always prefer The Lord of the Rings to Dune, and fantasy in general to science fiction. Also, on a slightly different topic, the way you highlight the importance of ecology in Herbert's work, and the fact that you quote Liet Kynes rather than any other character, reminds us how Denis Villeneuve failed to understand the essence of Dune. I think that's a shame how he erased this fundamental aspect

  • @beaver_warrior
    @beaver_warrior20 күн бұрын

    Tolkien wanted his readers to dream. Herbert wanted his readers to wake up.

  • @rbweston
    @rbwestonАй бұрын

    I think that’s why Tolkien gave up with his LotR sequel, he would have gone down the Allegorical route of story telling, bring it too much into Frank Herberts style of storytelling. FYI, I read Dune belfore I read LorT, and love both books dearly.

  • @wyattthealchemist

    @wyattthealchemist

    Ай бұрын

    Good ol' Lort

  • @johnbayer9795

    @johnbayer9795

    Ай бұрын

    I also read _Dune_ first, when I was about 13. It was in fact the paperback's back cover that presented me with my first reference to LOTR--in a blurb from Arthur C. Clarke where he said he knew of nothing comparable to _Dune_ except for LOTR. Didn't get to Tolkien, though, till nearly 20.

  • @rajasmasala

    @rajasmasala

    Ай бұрын

    He got into Franco-ism. Writing an anti-fascist book didn't make sense to him anymore.

  • @Ashgarify

    @Ashgarify

    Ай бұрын

    To be clear.. are you saying Tolkien got into Francoism? If so, what on earth is that take based on?

  • @rajasmasala

    @rajasmasala

    Ай бұрын

    @@Ashgarify I might be mistaken. A lot of people are racist like LOTR is because they haven't been put on the spot properly by their friends, Tolkien seems to be one of those where the pushback from his friends directly to him seems mild -- basically I think his support of Franco may have similarities to centrists' support of the Gaza genocide. It goes back to reliance on regular media which can be as realistic as Tolkien's conception of race taken from in his day ancient race doctrine (just to be clear, scientifically he should and did know better as seen in his earlier-in-life rebuttals of some Nazis). If you need to understand Tolkien look at some of these liberals cheering on the killing of babies and refusing to back down from clear lies about beheaded babies or systematic rape (at least from Hamas - we do have proud testimonial of perpetrating this from IDF retirees from the 60s). I genuinely think you should have a really easy way to understand what Tolkein went through if you look at liberals who basically have become criminal patsies and have clearly gone through the psychological changes involved in being that.

  • @meupequenomundo
    @meupequenomundoАй бұрын

    I literally had tears as I understood how Dune doesn't have an "escape" perspective and it all made sense. And things make sense. Thank you for such a well written text.

  • @Jess_of_the_Shire

    @Jess_of_the_Shire

    Ай бұрын

    I'm so glad you enjoyed!

  • @hanpear

    @hanpear

    Ай бұрын

    maybe that’s why i enjoyed dune but it doesn’t sit with me in the way LOTR does. my toxic trait is i need a ton of escapism to enjoy something 🙃

  • @ElectricalExistence

    @ElectricalExistence

    Ай бұрын

    its a truly semitic story, written for the gentile, to feed us narcissism and hopelessness, to see our future as bleek and not worth fighting for. standard jewish fare. thats why Tolkien didnt like him, the writer of dune was an antiwhite commie scum bag.

  • @mattmcneely8271

    @mattmcneely8271

    Ай бұрын

    @@hanpear Toxic? Because of the kind of entertainment you enjoy? I think not.

  • @VictorIV0310

    @VictorIV0310

    Ай бұрын

    @@ElectricalExistence Balam Industries sponsored field trip.

  • @DanielBerke
    @DanielBerkeАй бұрын

    A thought that came to me after watching this: Tolkien may have thought Herbert was "cheating," in a sense, by having a story involving supernatural powers in a strictly secular setting. Prescience traditionally is the provenance of the divine, and yet with his "Spice" Herbert can have people using this supernatural ability entirely naturally without having to "back it up," so to speak; he gets the _perks_ of religion being true (the god-like ability to foretell the future), without having to make it actually _be_ true. It's possible that Tolkien saw this (or other aspects of the setting) as Herbert getting to have his cake and eat it too, and disliked that. Of course, "supernatural powers without a supernatural agent behind them" could be said of many stories, and I've no idea what Tolkien's thoughts on them were*. Just speculation on my part. *It's true there are plenty of science fiction stories that implicitly assume there is no supernatural reality, but also, in many stories that's as far as it goes and the topic is never explicitly discussed. Whereas in Dune the theme of there being no underlying truth to _any_ religion, and it all being a tool for control of the masses, is one of the main themes of the book.

  • @helloSanders
    @helloSandersАй бұрын

    lovely insight, thank you for sharing your work~

  • @bunny_wilder
    @bunny_wilderАй бұрын

    Isn't it also the case that Foundation was published in magazines first? Some of George RR Martin's stories as well, it seemed to be pretty common, just like you would self publish yourself online nowadays

  • @pwmiles56

    @pwmiles56

    Ай бұрын

    Same magazine, same editor -- John W Campbell at Astounding / Analog. Campbell had a terrific influence on science fiction, although you don't have to be a liberal to question his views

  • @jamespfp

    @jamespfp

    Ай бұрын

    Many of Asimov's books were published by the same magazines, in serialized form, then republished later. All of his "Robot" material, short stories and/or full-length novels for example. "Caves of Steel" is a fantastic story, totally could be made into a film by itself (and has 2 novels for a trilogy).

  • @pwmiles56

    @pwmiles56

    Ай бұрын

    Just to add, magazine sf was the staple until the 1950s. Sf books were comparatively rare. In fact many great books were "fix-ups" of magazine serials -- including the first three Foundation books

  • @Jess_of_the_Shire

    @Jess_of_the_Shire

    Ай бұрын

    That's an interesting comparison!

  • @restitvtororbis5330

    @restitvtororbis5330

    Ай бұрын

    Publishing segments of stories in magazines /periodical publications has been a thing for a surprisingly long time. Writers like Lovecraft went basically his entire writing career without ever getting his work published in a book or magazine that only included his work. Even notoriously long books like Crime and Punishment were often originally published in periodical segments, and that was in the 1860s and 70s.

  • @DaveJoria
    @DaveJoriaАй бұрын

    Great video. You mention “recovery” as finding magic in the mundane; and the first thing I think about in Dune is the Freman. In a far off planet with unthinkable technology, on a planet stuffed full of psychic-cocaine that fuels the universe, the substance they treat most highly is… water. I think Frank did a great job with that

  • @likeshine22

    @likeshine22

    Ай бұрын

    I still don't understand how the Fremen made anything. They lived in caves without means and materials to manufacture anything. They couldn't trade spice cause thats what the out worlders were already doing on the planet.

  • @Notsogoodguitarguy

    @Notsogoodguitarguy

    Ай бұрын

    I don't think that's what "recovery" means exactly. This isn't really recovery as it is just...well, logical. You covet most that which you don't have. If you don't have water, then water is the thing you'll treasure the most. Water isn't really magical, it doesn't really elevate anything to new heights. It's just a scarce resource.

  • @kuraim1020
    @kuraim102020 күн бұрын

    Cemented an incredible analysis. You marked a significant tribute to expanding the perspectives of the fans of both writers and adding to the reader community. Well done.

  • @gabrielperes5184
    @gabrielperes518426 күн бұрын

    Fantastic video! I first read lord of the rings twelve years ago and have loved it ever since, I read it again every couple of years. Have also been a huge tolkien fan ever since and I admire many of his thoughts and writings, even though I feel like he and I are very different people, especially on the religious side. My father has been a dune fan since the 80s when he first read it, and has always tried to get me to read the books, which he still has since he was a teen. I tried reading the first one a couple of times a few years ago and for some reason stopped in the beginning. Now, after the second movie came out, I decided to get back into it and have already read the first book and messiah. Almost halfway through children of dune now. Both dune and lotr are fantastic sagas and before now, I hadn't really tried to compare them. I can see some similarities and many differences, but this video was so well crafted it made me think so much more about this. Just subscribed to the channel and am looking forward to more. Keep it up!

  • @jocelyntrishell
    @jocelyntrishellАй бұрын

    The idea of consolation is not very present in middle eastern stories, even modern ME movies have very unhappy or unresolved endings. Maybe this was something Herbert noticed when writing his books with middle eastern influences. (ie Layla & Majnun, Men in the Sun, 1001 Nights short stories, Shahnameh short stories, Syrian Bride, Sandstorm)

  • @mikejohnstonbob935

    @mikejohnstonbob935

    Ай бұрын

    Tolkien only needed to look back in his own country's stories to see that consolidation is not a very common factor in these tales. Beowulf... Canterbury Tales... the Arthurian Legends... the Old Testament? My guess is that even though he loved the old times, he didn't like the stories in those times, so he wrote a world without those elements in them... the Hobbits basically read diaries and history books for FUN!

  • @alpharius4434

    @alpharius4434

    Ай бұрын

    @@mikejohnstonbob935 While I agree with your main argument, I would point that the old testament is basically very Middle easternly influenced.

  • @Leto2ndAtreides

    @Leto2ndAtreides

    Ай бұрын

    If you read the Brothers Grimm, and the earlier versions of many modern fairy tales... The world is a whole lot darker... Because that is what life was like for our ancestors.

  • @gg829

    @gg829

    Ай бұрын

    @@mikejohnstonbob935 Yeah, as I mentioned somewhere else, whatever high-minded explanation Tolkien gave for his work, the truth is that his writing is a modern petty bourgeois kitsch that could only be produced by a modern mind to fulfill its own needs. It really isn't a fairy tale in its original form, it is cottage porn brought on by the neurosis of a decaying class.

  • @crozraven

    @crozraven

    Ай бұрын

    I disagree, because like many (or every) of the old tales & myths, even the grimmest stories still have lessons & "hikmah" as many of Middle Eastern stories would call it for such consolations. Many of this ME stories give warnings & the exemplary conditions to avoid bad outcomes or to a path with good outcomes. It's a life guidance wrapped in a storytelling that relate to people as whole. It's a matter of different perspectives imo, as JRR Tolkien is a much more religious man while Frank Herbert is simply agnostic or nihilistic (for more recent POVs). It's like a perspectives of holy books being compared by a religious person & non religious person, regardless the deeper knowledge for such holy books. I mean look at GRRM works with ASOIAF or Moorcock's Elric of Melnibone or Kentaro Miura's Berserk that practically flipped everything about "fantasy" & put "dark/grimdark" title in it while unironically these stories are much more in common or similar to our old tales & fables throughout history & many cultures.

  • @khristophertanase3324
    @khristophertanase3324Ай бұрын

    I like both Frank Herbert’s “Dune” series, and JRR Tolkien’s “Lord of The Rings” but I am MUCH more connected to Tolkien’s work than Herbert’s. For me, Tolkien created a world which I wanted to live in but Herbert created a world that I would rather read about. Loved your take on this, and gave you a like and a sub. Keep up the good work!

  • @whwhywhywhywhywhywhy

    @whwhywhywhywhywhywhy

    Ай бұрын

    Tolkien made a world with ideals we can strive for in this world. Herbert made the world we already live in fantastical.

  • @Khyberization

    @Khyberization

    Ай бұрын

    ​@whwhywhywhywhywhywhy I certainly wouldn't want to live in it as a person with some pigmet in his skin. It was super Eurocentric, and that's fine. But his audience was very narrow. It was also very black and white morally speaking, which was why my young teenage mind loved it, but as an adult I found simplistic and "too fantastical" if that makes any sense. I don't like to think of people as good or evil, and living in a world that does would not sit well with me. Mind you I've only read the trilogy and the Hobbit, but that was the impression I got from Tolkien's world.

  • @lukaszspychaj9210

    @lukaszspychaj9210

    Ай бұрын

    @@Khyberization "But his audience was very narrow.", he says about probably the most well-known book non-religious book in history. Hmmmm

  • @Khyberization

    @Khyberization

    Ай бұрын

    @lukaszspychaj9210 Again, a very Eurocentric mindset. Also the people that know of him, and being his audience are two very different things. My Latina wife didn't know of him, nor did her family, to my surprise. They all knew who Paulo Coelho was however, and he didn't write in Spanish. They don't know Herbert either. In China, most of those I spoke to knew of Herbert but not Tolkien. Granted my slice were educated, Chinese, English speakers for the most part. And I knew of Liu Cixin and read his books. My time in the Middle East, and Russia made me realize that Dune was more popular than LOTR there. In western Europe it was the other way around. And in Canada everyone I know has read LOTR but few have read Dune. This is anecdotal, but again I believe I'm traveled enough to have broadened my views. Maybe because I dealt with engineers and scientists a lot, Dune naturally appealed more to them, so my slice is biased that way. But I truely believe the concepts and ideas in Dune appeal to a broader slice of the world, while Tolkiens western European fantasy has a much smaller target audience.

  • @RealCodreX

    @RealCodreX

    Ай бұрын

    ​@@lukaszspychaj9210It is FAAAR from being the most well known, non religious book in the world.

  • @LurkerAnonymous
    @LurkerAnonymousАй бұрын

    "Dune is fake and gay" - Saruman

  • @diollinebranderson6553

    @diollinebranderson6553

    3 күн бұрын

    This has no right to make me die laughing

  • @031Productions
    @031ProductionsАй бұрын

    On the bit about Recovery, I think Shymalan actually had a fantastic line in his movie Old that touched on that. One girl who aged up from basically toddler age described the world as "I see so many more colors now, but none of them are as bright."

  • @kacaubalau2531
    @kacaubalau2531Ай бұрын

    What a brilliant video essay. I learnt a lot and it gives greater depth to my understanding of two authors I love. I wrote my Honours thesis on the Dune cycle (ending with the God Emperor of Dune) a long time ago, but this introduced a lot of new information and analysis to me. Bravo!

  • @klowen7778

    @klowen7778

    Ай бұрын

    Yep, not surprising that Tolkien might've been a bit 'put off' by Herbert's much more _cynical_ POV... just like the similar tensions even now, between the fairy tale 'Utopian", vs the gritty, nihilistic 'dystopian' views of sci-fi's future.

  • @knotsbygordion
    @knotsbygordionАй бұрын

    Tolkien was a glorifier of pasts and thinking we fell from a height, and thus things are lesser and shrinking. Herbert was espousing a view of struggling out of the egg, and learning to go forward that we are beginning, and have to choose how we will grow.

  • @johndickie6449
    @johndickie6449Ай бұрын

    Spent the whole video gazing at the pipe. Magical thesis on Dune & Rings. You have also made me a better writer knowing these wise words JRR said. I shall be subscribing & looking forward to more videos. Thank you

  • @theghettogourmet6762
    @theghettogourmet67625 күн бұрын

    It's interesting to me how Herbert uses the Fugue to describe human history and its interpretation through his works and Tolkien using the same theme in the first act of The Silmarillion. How both authors used the same theme in such equally comparable, yet contrasting, effect in their stories is fascinating. Love them both and got my son started on both at 12-13. He took more to Dune than Lord of the Rings, but he still loves both.

  • @jawbone78
    @jawbone78Ай бұрын

    Congrats on the 100k. Your videos are some of the best on the subject I've seen, because you actually analyze and provide insight instead of just regurgitating the source material.

  • @SenjaiYT
    @SenjaiYTАй бұрын

    This is a criminally undersubscribed channel. I love these teardowns and thought experiments, great job. I think the juxtaposition of the _common goals_ between sci-fi and fantasy you mention is a pretty great articulation of often why I often need to occasionally switch from reading a bunch of sci-fi to going on a fantasy pivot and back again.

  • @Jess_of_the_Shire

    @Jess_of_the_Shire

    Ай бұрын

    Thanks so much!

  • @uncletrashero
    @uncletrasheroАй бұрын

    also would be interesting to see his reaction to finding out that our sun actually is in fact green

  • @raganwaites7107
    @raganwaites7107Ай бұрын

    Great video. I learned a lot. Random question. Where did you get that amazing green mug? 😁

  • @jessestaggs2136
    @jessestaggs2136Ай бұрын

    It was my love for both franchises that made me click on the thumbnail for this video. It was your pronunciation of Lisan Al Gaib that made me subscribe.

  • @dannyweisbaum1932
    @dannyweisbaum1932Ай бұрын

    I first read both of these books in the mid 1970s; I've since re-read the Lord of the Rings multiple times, but never re-read Dune. Although both were enjoyable, aside from the happy ending, few can match the combination of Tolkien's great story-telling with his mastery of the English language. For example, I cannot recall Herbert writing anything remotely as emotionally stirring as the last paragraph of the chapter "The Siege of Gondor": "And as if in answer there came from far away another note. Horns, horns, horns. In dark Mindolluin's sides they dimly echoed. Great horns of the North wildly blowing. Rohan had come at last.", unless it's the last paragraph of the chapter "The Ride of the Rohirrim." The escapism part is especially resonant with me. Though I liked Dune, it was more like reading a possible future for mankind, rather than something to get lost in, spending an evening and into the night with the LotR. What I enjoyed more than Dune was Raymond Feist's series of novels. I'd like to hear what Jess has to say about those.

  • @donny1960

    @donny1960

    Ай бұрын

    So many people confuse "profound" with emotional. Dune is very profound. It is a warning of sorts. Lord of the rings is just pure joy of storytelling. But if you look hard. Tolkien was giving lessons too. Do not let power and greed overwhelm your sense of "good"...... I also find it very satisfying that in the end. Herbert returns to the "manipulative", big ,bad, Bene Gesserit To be the "Saviors" of mankind. Is ironic.

  • @spartakos3178

    @spartakos3178

    Ай бұрын

    I discovered Feist through the video game "Return to Krondor" and a summer school teacher's recommendation. Not quite the same level of inspiration as Tolkien... but still excellent! I also enjoy, especially Feist's earlier works much better than Dune. Then there is the Shannarah series which eventually combines the pre-apacolyptic, post-apocalyptic, and far future fantasy. Both Feist and Brooks have written so many books that they are kind of recycling stories... but I do like the varied settings of both.

  • @devryndrives6623
    @devryndrives6623Ай бұрын

    I had that red leather bound version of Dune stolen from my locker in 7th grade. I've looked for a replacement for YEARS

  • @samhayes-astrion
    @samhayes-astrionАй бұрын

    "Fantasy and science fiction are fundamentally different genres." Me: _scrunches my face in confusion as i can't hear you over the sound of my blender turning fantasy and sci-fi into a science fantasy smoothie_

  • @lukecox6317
    @lukecox6317Ай бұрын

    I like Dune because of how it explores humanity and what it means to be human, celebrating what humans may be capable of. I like its exploration of philosophical themes even when I disagree with them. I enjoy how real the world is, how integrated technology and society are. I enjoy it because it is a well-told science fiction series, even if it does have its problems. Dune and tLotR are very different in many ways, but both are well-told tales with clear stances on the nature of humanity and reality. Also, congrats on exceeding 100k subscribers! 😁

  • @lewislewis4240
    @lewislewis4240Ай бұрын

    Hayao Miyazaki has to be the next person to talk about. I read an article couple weeks ago saying he didn’t like LOTR and had some interesting things to say could be a interesting video.

  • @geoffreyrichards6079

    @geoffreyrichards6079

    Ай бұрын

    I looked up the interview regarding his thoughts on LotR, and it seems that he was referring to the Peter Jackson films, calling out their elaborate battle scenes as glorification of violence. It’s a similar criticism that Tolkien’s son had with the films.

  • @darkhobo

    @darkhobo

    Ай бұрын

    Another example of an artist who can't get over himself.

  • @mordorderly1473

    @mordorderly1473

    Ай бұрын

    @@geoffreyrichards6079 That's really funny in the context of Nausicaa and Mononoke. There's a ton of cool, elaborate fight and battle scenes in those, especially in the Nausicaa manga.

  • @geoffreyrichards6079

    @geoffreyrichards6079

    Ай бұрын

    @@mordorderly1473 Not exactly. Sure, both of Miyazaki’s films depict really big battles, but they’re presented in different contexts. In his films, the battle scenes aren’t depicted as anything glorious or heroic - they’re super grisly and horrifying - and they don’t take up very large chunks of the film’s runtime. And likewise, Tolkien doesn’t dwell much on describing the action in the texts either.

  • @mordorderly1473

    @mordorderly1473

    Ай бұрын

    @@geoffreyrichards6079 I don't think that's true. Tolkien and Miyazaki may both genuinely belabor the cruelty and senselessness of war, but both have justified violence as a means to an end and, at places, a necessity. Prince Ashitaka fights heroically and so does Nausicaa. It's overwhelmingly true in Nausicaa's manga even with the moments of horrific violence. And how else am I meant to see Boromir's sacrifice or Eowyn and Merry's defeat of the Witch-king as except heroic?

  • @paulferranet382
    @paulferranet382Ай бұрын

    Your thoughts on the kind of escape proposed by the two are very interesting. Imo that is where the power of those stories lies. Though of course it is rooted in their author's rich culture. I love that Herbert with his very different universe and writing, shows that this grand escape is possible.

  • @rogeriomarques5960
    @rogeriomarques596013 күн бұрын

    Bravo, very good analysis, for its plausibility. I can find value in both bodies of work, from Tolien, and Herbert. There is timeless wisdom in both. I think it is important that we have stories powered by loving providence with a good ending to inspire us to find easy, quicky fixes to nihilism, as it is important to develop our psychic muscles to take in stories that are powered by human failings, where we sober up to the flaws of our human nature and learn to work with them equanimously, magnanimously, closer to the ideals of a Taoist Master, a Stoic Sage, a Zen Buddhist Master, or a Christian Saint, etc.

  • @samm8190
    @samm8190Ай бұрын

    please Please PLEASE make a video about Michael Moorcock, specifically his thoughts on Tolkien in his essay “Epic Pooh”. His criticism of Tolkien is very well known and I’d love to hear your thoughts. It’s the video we’ve all been waiting for!!!!

  • @Androsynth75

    @Androsynth75

    Ай бұрын

    This. Moorcock is enormously influential and seems to have fallen off the map these days.

  • @jmatos316

    @jmatos316

    Ай бұрын

    I met him once, great guy… I love the memory I have of reading Silmarillion and a few months later Reading Elric of Melnibone 😊 and think, hey, this guy is like Turin - black sword, Dragon helm lol

  • @sebastianevangelista4921

    @sebastianevangelista4921

    Ай бұрын

    Moorcock also criticized Tolkien in another essay titled 'Starship Stormtroopers'. The book 'Tolkien in The Twenty-First Century' by Nick Groom nicely points out that Moorcock worked off of straw man arguments. I highly recommend watching the video 'Elric of Melniboné, the Original Witcher (Elric vs. Geralt)' by Proper Bird along with the rest of her channel because it's criminally underrated and deserves way, way more views!

  • @EddietheBastard

    @EddietheBastard

    Ай бұрын

    Moorcock's work is a tad less literary than either Tolkien's or Herbert's

  • @sebastianevangelista4921

    @sebastianevangelista4921

    Ай бұрын

    @@jmatos316 Although I've grown to criticize his takes on Tolkien I will in no way challenge him being a decent man overall. If anything he seems too low key and chill in interviews haha. He's also the kind of author who will more than openly gush about the writers who've influenced him, which shows a considerable amount of humility.

  • @franciswalsh8416
    @franciswalsh8416Ай бұрын

    This was my first time watching and listening to your show. I subscribed as fast as I could. I love both Dune and Lord of the Rings and you did a fantastic job of looking at them side by side. I am going to find your earlier shows and get caught up. My favorite LOTR character is Eowyn and second is Faramir, so I will look for any references to them specifically. I really look forward to being part of your audience.

  • @Raumance
    @RaumanceАй бұрын

    So basically Tolkien wanted stories to be about escapism where as Herbert's stories were about the horrors of real choices.

  • @the1khronohs40
    @the1khronohs40Ай бұрын

    Thank YOU for a surprisingly good channel with great commentary and discussion! ❤

  • @elishashmalo3731
    @elishashmalo3731Ай бұрын

    Your videos are phenomenal!! I used to watch a lot of other channels that would focus on the lore and history of lotr. But, now that I know basically all of it, I find your, more analytical, videos so meaningful. Your style of writing is very entertaining and the actual content is very deep. I really appreciate all your hard work, you are an excellent scholar. Keep in up! Congrats on 100k.

  • @ageekywriter
    @ageekywriterАй бұрын

    Funny I was just think about this...I think the algorithm sniffed out my love for Dune and LOTR and put it together.

  • @DanielLopez-ob9jz

    @DanielLopez-ob9jz

    Ай бұрын

    Nice Archer pfp

  • @ageekywriter

    @ageekywriter

    Ай бұрын

    @DanielLopez-ob9jz Thank you, lol. I approve of the Lisa one you are rocking as well.

  • @Double0hobo
    @Double0hobo22 күн бұрын

    This was a great video and had a lot of good points. Just thought I'd give my input Ive read LOTR and The Hobbit a handful of times over the years and I'm not a big reader usually, but its one of the few i really love. I picked up Dune last week and haven't been able to put it down. I love the way it shows the internal monologues of the characters, and the way the characters are as you described all humans. Not a big deal but it helps with relating yourself to the characters in a big way where as when you picture a Hobbit or an Elf you may think you understand their goals but its hard to imagine what they actually think like. Obviously theres more about Dune to love but thats just one thing I've been thinking about as I read it.

  • @madsteph9375
    @madsteph937529 күн бұрын

    they both wrote about religion as an underlying theme, but from wildly different perspectives. it'd be interesting to know if herbert had a strong opinion of lord of the rings...

  • @photon4076
    @photon4076Ай бұрын

    I think there may be some truth to the joke that it was Duncan Idaho's name: The worldbuilding details like names are much less cohesive and thought through in Dune than they are in Lord of the Rings. It is plausible that these details pulled Tolkien out of the story when he read it in the same way that Father Christmas did in Narnia. I quite like both Lord of the Rings and Dune, the central concepts of both are interesting and worth reading, but, metaphorically speaking, Herbert wrapt his gift in old newspapers, while Tolkien picked the finest gift wrapping paper.

  • @laurie1183

    @laurie1183

    Ай бұрын

    Dune's world falls apart very quickly if you think about it. Doesn't surprise me that Tolkien wouldn't be a fan.

  • @yippykiay13

    @yippykiay13

    Ай бұрын

    @@laurie1183just to preface because this is the internet, I’m not criticizing your take I’m just genuinely curious…how?

  • @me-myself-i787

    @me-myself-i787

    Ай бұрын

    Yeah. Like, Jessica and Paul are very normal names. Which would make sense, because the Bene Gesserit was a strict, conformist, traditional organisation, so it's likely that they would've kept using names which were common during the Golden Age of Earth. But then, this falls apart because of the Reverend Mother Gaius Mohiam, who's a Bene Gesserit, and Irulan is also a Bene Gesserit, and these are not common names at all. Although, come to think about it, perhaps Jessica was originally called something else, but then the Bene Gesserit changed her name once they learned of Leto's fascination with the Golden Age of Earth, as part of their attempt to seduce him as part of their breeding program to produce a Kwisatz Haderach. That would make sense. And then Leto chose Paul's name, again, because of his fascination with the Golden Age of Earth. And maybe he wanted Paul to twist religion for his own purposes and gain a large following like Paul the Apostle did. But also, the names don't really seem inconsistent with each other. We don't really see enough characters from each culture to determine whether the names are consistent with that culture, so we should probably assume that they are. I think the main reason why Tolkien didn't like Dune was because it didn't have flowery, descriptive prose, and as a result didn't form an image in his mind's eye. (It had the opposite effect on me: Herbert's prose kept me engaged, and I was completely able to picture what was happening, whereas LoTR was more difficult. But it's probably different for different people.)

  • @bumponalog5001

    @bumponalog5001

    Ай бұрын

    ​​@@yippykiay13There's a lot of things that you can't think about too hard. How do Sandworms live? A creature that large needs so many calories that it would not find in the desert. If Spice is so important, why isn't the planet it's found in given more attention and support? The military tactics used are silly half the time as well.

  • @samuelskinner7704

    @samuelskinner7704

    Ай бұрын

    @@yippykiay13 The combat. If you are stuck at low tech, you'd be using spears (the most common weapon in human history); slightly higher, spears with explosive charges at the end and with modern technology flamethrowers.

  • @johng92
    @johng92Ай бұрын

    When I clicked on this video, with this title, I immediately thought of Tolkien’s catholic beliefs. To preface, it’s known that Tolkien framed LoTR to be a purely Anglo mythology, as if to say, “This is what came before modern times”. Frank Herbert’s Dune, from what I understand, is what came well after our society reached a myriad of pinnacles. These characters are humans, descended from an Earth long made uninhabitable, who have reached across the galaxy to inhabit other worlds. They participate in the same behaviors to which humans have always been accustomed. My understanding of the Bene Gesserit is that they are an evolution of actual Catholicism. I’m wondering if Tolkien recognized the similarities and disliked Dune so greatly because of his devout beliefs. Love your content and I am currently re-reading both LotR and Dune. They are both amazing stories.

  • @GothGlitch93

    @GothGlitch93

    Ай бұрын

    Dune was sort of what happens after parody. It was a profound sincerity of purpose, but a profound mockery of the originating belief.

  • @307cavalier5

    @307cavalier5

    Ай бұрын

    What's really fun, Dune being set way in the future with taboos against machines, and earth long dead, ok, so now Use David Brins Postman as A reference point, specifically the Servants of Cyclops and the Augments. Society gets rebuilt with a strong technological progress, thus leading too the oppression of man by our machines.

  • @nikolaos6083

    @nikolaos6083

    Ай бұрын

    @@GothGlitch93 Extremely well put.

  • @michaeltelson9798
    @michaeltelson9798Ай бұрын

    Dune’s sand worms are based upon the predatory nematodes, especially the genus Monochus. The 3 lips is the key. Originally these microscopic creatures had 6 lips, but as they evolved lips fused together. In the case of Monochus pairs fused given 3 lips each bearing a tooth. I have degrees in plant pathology and nematodes are actually studied under that heading. They can be vectors of plant diseases or cause injuries to plants themselves. Monochus feeds upon other nematodes. I saw one illustration of Monochus that looked just like the cover illustration from Dune.

  • @rfv618
    @rfv61827 күн бұрын

    Beatifully argued essay! This would be at home at any traditional publication, yet you have great skill in storytelling through this medium of KZread. Not surprised you reached 100k subscribers, I just became another one

  • @paulkelly9250
    @paulkelly9250Ай бұрын

    Great stuff. I don't know how much prep you do for these but your presentation is almost like an enjoyable relaxed English class. Thanks Mucho.

  • @UnholyTriforceDelenn
    @UnholyTriforceDelennАй бұрын

    New viewer/subscriber here. This video literally came up as a suggestion, and I'm honestly glad it did. I am very much a fan of both the Fantasy and Sci-Fi genres, and have been since I was a child. My mom taught me to read, and introduced me to all the best books. The Hobbit/The Lord of the Rings, DUNE, The Circle of Light series, The Chronicles of Thomas Covenant the Unbeliever, The Myth series, not to mention so many beautiful and often Pagan perspective variations of the Arthurian legend. I was also raised with both Star Trek and Star Wars, and love both. To simplify that a bit, I have a deep love of all these worlds and stories mainly because my mom showed me the beauty of them in her own special way. She read The Hobbit to me as a very young child, and I've never forgotten it. She also taught me about the world of DUNE, and there was so much she had to explain to me when I was 9 reading it. She even taught me how to apply the "Fear is the Mind Killer" mantra as a way of helping manage my crippling anxiety. There's so much more I'd love to say about why I love both Tolkien's work and DUNE, but this comment is already too long. haha.

  • @kevinfishburne
    @kevinfishburneАй бұрын

    It's nice to hear someone pronounce things properly. The bar's low but this is a great effort at raising it. Sophistication beyond is great; hopefully it will rope some people into thinking fondly.

  • @Keith_KC8TCQ
    @Keith_KC8TCQ24 күн бұрын

    I've been a huge fan of both Tolkien (Hobbit LOTR and Silmarillion) and Herbert (Dune series) for almost 50 years I was always a voracious reader even as a young lad, but in the summer I was also very active, always outside. One summer right after school was over for the year, I ended up getting a really bad sunburn and got sun poisoning. My entire back was covered in blisters, I had to spend the entire summer indoors laying on my stomach. I asked my mom to get me some books from the library which was thankfully next door (small town of 800 people) That summer I read The Hobbit, the entire LOTR series as well as Dune, Dune Messiah and Children of Dune. Those books helped me get through a painful (literally) summer and ever since I have re-read all of them every year. I have worn out several copies of them over the almost 50 years I've been reading them

  • @davidniemi6553
    @davidniemi6553Ай бұрын

    Thank you for your channel and congratulations on decisively zooming past 100K subscribers. I see some similarity in at least the early Dune books and the Lord of the Rings -- particularly in the sense of "Destiny". Bilbo is an earlier, different story, where the result is not yet foreshadowed but a fun and quirky surprise, but in Frodo, Aragorn, even Gollum, we know something important must happen. No different with Paul Atreides and everyone around (him however oddly named), and the mysterious dreams and prophesies that take some time to be properly understood. Of course, I greatly appreciate both series of books, and appreciate your comparisons and contrast of them.

  • @asetto15
    @asetto15Ай бұрын

    I feel that Tolkien would have had the same opinion on George R. R. Martin's work, which also realistically explores humanity's self-destructive and repetitive tendencies and is probably even more separated from Tolkien's 4 principles of fantasy. Would love to hear your thoughts on that! Also congrats on 100K!

  • @kennethpryde966

    @kennethpryde966

    Ай бұрын

    Martin's writing is bleak and sinister, and rejects "good" as a virtue. Even the gods are more like demons who seem to thrive on murder and misery. I really loved the first two books, but had trouble finishing the third. In his quest to make a more realistic story, he lost the point of why people (alright, I) read fantasy.

  • @grungehog

    @grungehog

    Ай бұрын

    Martin is a good writer but a bad author, his prose is strong but he lacks any morals, his writing is visceral and addictive but he is what Marx is to John Locke. The grimdark cynical fantasy of Martin does not inspire, it is merely a soap opera about vile people. Tolkien wrote about virtue and how you can find hope and joy from the smallest things, while Martin writes about vice and debauchery.

  • @landonian1223
    @landonian12239 күн бұрын

    i've watched a lot of dune content as of late, and i gotta say your analysis (in generally really, not just dune) is maybe the best i've seen. loved the vid!

  • @oguzo.1882
    @oguzo.1882Ай бұрын

    I don't like the idea of pure evil, pure good. It is inhuman. I like that gray area Herbert presents. It is honest. Dune gives a realisation of that thing that is very deep inside of us.

Келесі