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- Watching Tibetan sky burials on youtube totally counts as doing anthropology homework, right?
- Huzzah, new artist!crush. Lucy Nurnberg.

Geography of Death III
- I've been considering the nature of some of Tolkien's inventions I hadn't much thought about before, e.g. Balrogs.
For someone who is mainly interested in darker characters, I've never found the Balrogs particularly compelling so I've generally ignored them. Now that I've started to ask what on earth a Balrog is, I find this is puzzling. At any rate, it's puzzling for me given the various strictures my interpretation of Arda's physical and metaphysical properties puts on these matters.
I could interpret Balrogs the same way I interpret Ulmo's Maiar, as entities who are so emotionally/spiritually attached to their own element that they're become predispositioned to it and can't exist in any other type of physical state. That's all well and good until I consider how one goes about "killing" such a being, as Balrogs seem a bit prone to being killed. One can't kill a malleable amalgamation of flame.
The killing thing I've addressed with Draugluin and the dragons by conceiving of them as the results of quasi-sorcerous, quasi-scientific programs to bind Maiar to the frames of creatures. Somewhat the same as Melkor himself, these Maiar have been "distilled" into something other than themselves (Draugluin into sentient, mortal offspring--dragons into the indefinite maintenance of a massive organism that is technically impossible)--so that, when their forms are killed, their spirits no longer have enough of themselves to hold onto and patch back together into a new incarnation. If I take the same tack with Balrogs, envisioning them as being chained to solid forms, that brings up the annoying yet very interesting question of what kind of weird biochemical things would have to go on to sustain a burning body. Way out of my league with that one there, yet that's kind of the way I'm leaning because it would be fairly creepy and horrific as well as an intellectual challenge.
- Huzzah, new artist!crush. Lucy Nurnberg.

Geography of Death III
- I've been considering the nature of some of Tolkien's inventions I hadn't much thought about before, e.g. Balrogs.
For someone who is mainly interested in darker characters, I've never found the Balrogs particularly compelling so I've generally ignored them. Now that I've started to ask what on earth a Balrog is, I find this is puzzling. At any rate, it's puzzling for me given the various strictures my interpretation of Arda's physical and metaphysical properties puts on these matters.
I could interpret Balrogs the same way I interpret Ulmo's Maiar, as entities who are so emotionally/spiritually attached to their own element that they're become predispositioned to it and can't exist in any other type of physical state. That's all well and good until I consider how one goes about "killing" such a being, as Balrogs seem a bit prone to being killed. One can't kill a malleable amalgamation of flame.
The killing thing I've addressed with Draugluin and the dragons by conceiving of them as the results of quasi-sorcerous, quasi-scientific programs to bind Maiar to the frames of creatures. Somewhat the same as Melkor himself, these Maiar have been "distilled" into something other than themselves (Draugluin into sentient, mortal offspring--dragons into the indefinite maintenance of a massive organism that is technically impossible)--so that, when their forms are killed, their spirits no longer have enough of themselves to hold onto and patch back together into a new incarnation. If I take the same tack with Balrogs, envisioning them as being chained to solid forms, that brings up the annoying yet very interesting question of what kind of weird biochemical things would have to go on to sustain a burning body. Way out of my league with that one there, yet that's kind of the way I'm leaning because it would be fairly creepy and horrific as well as an intellectual challenge.
no subject
Date: 2012-10-28 07:39 pm (UTC)Well, my first idea involved ending things on a really wretched note with Curumo stuck in the Void with a very cranky Melkor. This was, like, back in 2007 or 08, and since then my interpretation of events and characters has grown too much for that idea to be acceptable. More recently I considered just obliterating him in a poetical way. I’m currently pondering him being at the Dagor Dagorath, which would just be kind of awkward for all involved, since his main problem as I’ve characterized it is that he’s, uh, made himself a lot of enemies over the eons by being a flake. /ramble
Of course, he did offer to write me a note if dad kept up his "You need a 4.0"....
This professor sounds like a good fellow.
no subject
Date: 2013-06-29 10:52 pm (UTC)Prof is a very good fellow, as I'm sure the fact that he's one of the few good things about uni I talk about proves. Nice, has a sense of humor, patience with my complete and utter breakdowns and turning that one test in late...
no subject
Date: 2013-06-30 07:01 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-07-01 01:54 am (UTC)