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Profs & Pints Nashville: Where Middle Earth Met Narnia-Advance ticket sales have ended.

By Profs and Pints (other events)

Wednesday, January 18 2023 6:30 PM 9:00 PM CDT
 
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Advance ticket sales have ended but a limited number of additional tickets remain available at the door.

Profs and Pints Nashville presents: “Where Middle Earth Met Narnia,” a look at how J.R.R. Tolkien and C.S. Lewis together invented the genre of modern fantasy, with Hal Poe, professor of faith and culture at Union University and author of a three-volume C.S. Lewis biography.

When J.R.R. Tolkien published The Lord of the Rings in three volumes between 1954 and 1955, bookstores and libraries did not know where to put it. Not fitting neatly into established categories of books, it often landed in the still-new section devoted to science fiction. Tolkien had so much trouble writing his groundbreaking masterpiece that, he later acknowledged, he could not have completed it without the encouragement of C.S. Lewis, whose assistance might have extended even to suggesting the basic plots of The Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit as well.

Come learn about the fascinating relationship between two authors whose imaginations produced works that captured ours. The speaker, Hal Poe, is a scholar of literature and religion who drew rave reviews with the talk on Edgar Allan Poe that that he gave at the Fait La Force taproom in October.

Poe will discuss how Tolkien and Lewis became friends through their shared love of Norse mythology, but they came at their work from distinct intellectual backgrounds and perspectives.

Lewis received a classical education that involved mastery of Greek and Latin along with the great literature and philosophy of those cultures. In his reading, he had fallen in love with the great story/plot of the medieval period in which the hero journeys against great adversity to the end of the world for the great cause and then returns a changed person.

Tolkien, on the other hand, was a philologist who had focused his education on how language works. His great private work involved creating his own mythology of an imaginary place he called Middle-Earth. He began working on his mythology during World War I, and, like all good Norse mythology, all of his stories ended in disaster, destruction, desolation, and death.

Join us as we explore how Lewis taught Tolkien the story/plot of “there and back again.” We’ll look at how their relationship played out, including the complication that was Tolkien’s hatred of Lewis's Narnia stories. You won’t need to step through a wardrobe or sneak past orcs to take part in the fun. Just get to Fait La Force in Nashville’s Chestnut Hill neighborhood. (Advance tickets: $13.50 plus sales tax and processing fees. Doors: $17, or $15 with a student ID. Listed time is for doors. Talk starts 30 minutes later. Please allow yourself time to place any orders and get seated and settled in.)

Image: Clockwise from upper left: C.S. Lewis as photographed by Arthur Strong; a map of Narnia sold as a poster (artist unknown); Barbara Remington's map of Middle-Earth; J.R.R. Tolkien (photographer unknown); a flag of Middle Earth’s Kingdom of Rohan (artist: Pbroks13), covers of the first editions of the authors’ groundbreaking works; a flag of Narnia (artist: Groteddy). All images from Wikimedia Commons.