Burren Tolkien Convention Line-up Announced
MEDIA RELEASE
For Immediate Release
Wednesday, 1 May
2013
Burren Tolkien Convention Line-up
Announced
- Participants to walk in
the footsteps of Lord of the Rings author, trace links to
Burren
Burren, IRELAND - A model
maker and special effects artist for Peter Jackson’s 2012
film ‘The Hobbit’ and a leading international academic
on the writings of JRR Tolkien have been named amongst the
line-up of participants for the Burren Tolkien Convention
from May 9-16th.
The inaugural Convention is being
organised by the Burren Tolkien Society and will take place
in the Burren Region of County Clare, as part of The
Gathering Ireland 2013. The organisers say the event will
highlight Tolkien’s many visits to the Burren and how the
world-famous karst landscape and Celtic legends of the West
of Ireland may have inspired his masterwork, The Lord of the
Rings.
The Convention will feature contributions
from Tolkien experts, writing workshops, Tolkien-inspired
culinary and music sessions, lectures and guided walks of
the locations frequented by Tolkien, including Poll na
Gollum Cave which event organisers suggest influenced the
creation of one of the author’s most famous characters
(Gollum).
Tolkien visited the West of Ireland on
numerous occasions with his close friend and fellow fantasy
literature icon CS Lewis, author of The Chronicles of Narnia
series. Their friendship dates back to 1926 when the pair
met at Oxford University, 7 years before The Hobbit was
originally published. Tolkien also spent considerable time
in the Burren when he was External Examiner to NUI
Galway’s English Department on five separate occasions
between 1949 and 1959, during which time he revised and
published The Lord of the Rings.
The weeklong
celebration will include a talk by Tolkien expert
Dr. Alison Grant Milbank (Associate
Professor of Literature & Theology, University of
Nottingham) about how landscape and nature influenced the
author’s writings, Dr. Charles Travis
(Post-Doctoral Research Fellow, Trinity Long Room
Hub) will present ‘Tolkien’s Topography: A Case for the
Burren’, Irishman Mark Maher (Model Maker
for the 2012 movie, ‘The Hobbit’) will present“ An
Unexpected Journey”, and Barry Mc Govern
(actor & playwright) will perform readings in the
Library of the Mc Corkendale residence – now the drawing
room of Gregan’s Castle Hotel in Ballyvaughan, which was
frequented by Tolkien.
Other events include a
Creative Writing workshop with Frank Golden
(acclaimed poet & fiction writer); a presentation
by Dr. Liam Campbell (author & Tolkien
academic) on his book "The Ecological Augury in the Works of
J.R.R. Tolkien", a talk by Dr. Mark Scott
(Senior Teacher, UCD School of Geography, Planning
& Environmental Policy) on the influence of landscape on
Tolkien’s work, a presentation entitled “Tolkien’s
landscape - the archaeology of the Burren” by
Shane Delaney (senior archaeologist &
project manager, Irish Archaeological
Consultancy).
Meanwhile, a book signed by Tolkien
will be auctioned at the end of the festival. The
author-owned copy of Tolkien’s book, ‘Tree and Leaf’,
has been donated to the Burren Tolkien Society by
Jeremy Prince, Tolkien’s undergraduate at
Oxford University during the 1960’s. The book will be put
on display during the festival before being auctioned off.
Mr. Prince will also present a talk about his experiences of
studying under Tolkien.
“We look forward to
welcoming people to County Clare next week and facilitating
them as they walk in the footsteps of Tolkien, arguably one
of the most important writers of the 20th century,”
commented Burren native and Burren Tolkien Society
Chairperson Peter Curtin, who said the Convention
will feature something of interest to everyone who
attends.
“As well as a host of talks and
presentations on Tolkien’s work and discussions on how his
writings were influenced by his numerous visits to the
Burren, the Convention will also feature a Burren walk in
Tolkien’s footsteps taking in Poll na Gollum and other
sites of archaeological interest and inspiration; the launch
of the Hobbit Ale brewed locally especially for the
festival, a Lord of the Rings Hog Roast, The Tolkien Quest
featuring Lord of Rings costume dress, and music sessions
with a Tolkien theme.”
Commenting on the
background to the Convention, Mr. Curtin said: “From
studying Tolkien’s works and correspondences as well as
having spoken with people who knew the man, we are certain
that his most famous work, The Lord of the Rings, was
inspired, at least in part, by his experience of The
Burren.”
He added: “We believe that Tolkien
denied the Burren links when his masterwork was published in
1954 as he might have felt that Irish influences would have
been unpalatable to his largely English audience at the
time. In the few years leading up to his death in 1973
however, Tolkien spoke more openly about how his writings
were influenced by the themes and ideas of Irish and Celtic
Mythology. Although he referred to Gaelic as an unattractive
language, he admitted that he had studied it and found it to
be of great historical and philological interest. He also
said he was suffering from acute Eire-starvation, having not
visited his favourite Counties of Clare, Galway and Cork for
a number of years.”
Mr. Curtin said that another
clue to where Tolkien found his inspiration for the Lord of
the Rings is the topography of the Burren. He said
topographical comparisons of the Burren landscape and
‘Middle Earth’, as featured in the Lord of the Rings,
show “striking similarities”.
“Dr. Charles
Travis, a Historical-Cultural Geography PHD graduate and
Research Associate at Trinity College Dublin's Long Room
Hub, compared the actual topography of the Burren - around
Gortaclare Mountain to be precise - with the Misty Mountains
from Tolkien's Middle Earth map with the Middle Earth region
of Rohan in the foreground and the Misty Mountains covering
the spine of the mountain ridge with runs into Gortaclare
Mountain. Mr. Travis has confirmed that the curve of the
Misty Mountain range in Tolkien's 'imaginary' map seems to
fit the actual topography of this region of the Burren. He
added that the topography could arguably support the case
being made for this region of the Burren being one source of
inspiration for Tolkien,” explained Mr. Curtin.
For more on the Burren Tolkien Convention visit www.burrentolkiensociety.ie
or see
Facebook.
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