More “Mapping Mordor”
original date | 2017-11-18 18:47 utc |
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republished | 2024-06-10 20:19 utc |
topics | orig. on PostHope; Tolkien work |
note | This post was originally published on PostHope, where it’s still available, along with several public comments. |
Some of you might know that my “new” plan for the “Mapping Mordor” chapter had been to get all toponymic research done before the surgery, so that I could simply write between then and Yule — submitting a text draft in late December (only six weeks late) and telling the editors how many graphic images I’d be supplying (and where they’d need to go and what size they’d need to be) — and preparing the graphics in January while the editors and lay readers were looking at my draft text.
Having spent the last four days amassing 292 citations for Ephel Dúath alone (with two or three dozen left to go, probably), I’ve realized that this will not work, timing-wise. (FWIW, I have completed research on Ered Lithui, Lithlad, Nurn, Lake Núrnen, and the Nargil Pass; pretty much everything else you can think of in Mordor is not yet tackled.) Were I to continue with this plan, I might be able to get the research alone done by the end of the year — assuming I could resume work very shortly after returning home from the hospital. This would definitely be too late for publication in the Worldbuilding volume.
And so, reluctantly, I’m shifting to a course which will cost me a bit more time in the long run (when considering both “Mapping Mordor” and my Big Project™), but which might mean that I could still have a draft chapter finished by the end of December. Essentially, writing the chapter the old-fashioned way:
I’ll be trawling through Christopher Tolkien’s The History of Middle-earth (esp. books 6, 7, 8, 9, and 12, of course) for CT’s analysis of the layers and stages of his father’s work with Mordor, and assessing his analyses of his father’s various maps and sketches. I’ll be building up my own timeline of changes to how his father pictured the geography and structures of Mordor, combining information from the manuscripts and drafts with analysis of the sketches and maps in a way that will be both more focussed and more holistic than Christopher’s (CT tended to analyze sets of texts and then present maps separately). This always was (in a smaller way) going to be step #2, of course — but now it becomes bigger, and it becomes step #1.
With luck, this will still allow me to get a good polished draft to the editors by Yuletide.
Thanks to you all for your comments here and by e‑mail, and thanks, too, for understanding my lack of replies!
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