I think you can also throw a bit of the romantic notions of knighthood, King Arthur, shit I don’t like to throw Tolkien under the bus but he probably bears some blame here too
Tolkein wrote the greatest threat to not-Britain being a race of uncivilized fundamentally evil monsters led by basically Satan.
I love The Hobbit and LOTR (and firmly believe that anyone who claims to like the Silmarillion has someone locked up in their basement…) but there was a LOT of problematic shit in there. Nothing compared to HP “Ask Me What My Cat Was Named” Lovecraft (which, ironically, has resulted in some AMAZING queer twists on the stories) but a lot of the fucked up shit that is currently being done away with in fantasy can be tied to Tolkein.
This is one of the reasons I love the Once and Future King so much. It’s still eighty years old at this point, so it’s certainly problematic in some ways…but one of the central themes of the book is grappling with the idea that Might Makes Right, and Arthur is desperately trying to figure out how Power should, or if it can, be wielded justly. Definitely an attempt at deconstructing the Arthurian fantasy, written during (and kind of after) WW2.
I think you can also throw a bit of the romantic notions of knighthood, King Arthur, shit I don’t like to throw Tolkien under the bus but he probably bears some blame here too
Tolkein wrote the greatest threat to not-Britain being a race of uncivilized fundamentally evil monsters led by basically Satan.
I love The Hobbit and LOTR (and firmly believe that anyone who claims to like the Silmarillion has someone locked up in their basement…) but there was a LOT of problematic shit in there. Nothing compared to HP “Ask Me What My Cat Was Named” Lovecraft (which, ironically, has resulted in some AMAZING queer twists on the stories) but a lot of the fucked up shit that is currently being done away with in fantasy can be tied to Tolkein.
This is one of the reasons I love the Once and Future King so much. It’s still eighty years old at this point, so it’s certainly problematic in some ways…but one of the central themes of the book is grappling with the idea that Might Makes Right, and Arthur is desperately trying to figure out how Power should, or if it can, be wielded justly. Definitely an attempt at deconstructing the Arthurian fantasy, written during (and kind of after) WW2.