(urth) Gummed-Up Works or Got Lives?
David Stockhoff
dstockhoff at verizon.net
Fri Dec 16 09:32:07 PST 2011
On 12/16/2011 11:59 AM, Gerry Quinn wrote:
> *From:* David Stockhoff <mailto:dstockhoff at verizon.net>
> > Dead on. Much of our Western myths, and as they are perpetuated
> today by
> >
> Hollywood, involve the brave and capable few who are besieged by the
> >
> weak and cowardly many. This has little basis in reality, of course, and
> >
> it has always struck me as a bit pathological.
> It does form a good basis for a thrilling story, with unequivocally
> virtuous characters for the audience to identify with, and villains
> who may be despatched in interesting ways without invoking feelings of
> guilt, or decreasing the villain supply. I suspect such stories have
> been popular in most cultures.
> Even the Ascians can enjoy the story of a lone hero who wins out by
> his persistence in the face of vicissitudes from the multitude.
> - Gerry Quinn
Absolutely. However, I don't share your suspicion in the slightest.
I'm no expert but I've never seen this convention figure so strongly
anywhere in any non-European literature in all of history. It may as
well not exist outside Europe.
I should have said that the oldest such stories are Greek, and some of
them are true. Tolkien's generation knew them well.
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