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Msg# 6411

Movie-verse versus Bookverse (Re: Question concerning Dwim's list) Posted by elanor of aquitania December 01, 2005 - 3:00:08 Topic ID# 6411
rabidsamfan wrote Tue, 29 Nov 2005 22:04:52 -0500:
> drawn equally on both sources the option of putting their
> stories in with
> the crossovers? Either that or by caveat declare that if a
> story uses any
> *plot* element of the films (rather than any *visual*
> element), it should be
> with the movieverse stories.

Hi Rabidsamfan,

IMO both solutions are too strong.

1) I thought cross-overs were for the mixing of
other movies like "Pirates of the Caribbean" with Tolkien's universe.
IMO the movie by PJ is a story working with
elements of Tolkien's Universe, which becomes
towards the third part more and more AU.

2) IMO the solution that 'any *plot* element' suffices to shove
the story into movie-verse is also too strong a measure.

My question is a result of one of my own stories
where I use PJ's pyre scene to shorten the story line
which else is completely book-verse.

I would go with caveats in the summary
and I would like to change Dwim's text to
something like

###########
My story is:

1. Bookverse: *predominantly* based on the writings of J.R.R. Tolkien and/or
drafts made available by C. Tolkien

2. Filmverse: *predominantly* based on a film adaptation of "The Lord of the
Rings" or "The Hobbit"
###########

Best wishes Elanor

> Message: 2
> Date: Tue, 29 Nov 2005 22:04:52 -0500
> From: rabidsamfan <rabidsamfan@verizon.net>
> Subject: Re: Question concerning Dwim's list (Re: Tying Up
> Loose Ends--categorization form repost w/minor revision)
>
> There are a lot of stories that draw on the visual elements
> of the film
> without it changing the plotline of the books particularly --
> all those
> relentlessly blue eyed Frodos owe a debt to PJ anyway, even if they're
> meeting the Barrow Wight. But maybe it's just me: I feel like I've
> seen more than one story which tries to reconcile the book and the
> movieverses. Perhaps we could offer writers who really feel
> that they've
> drawn equally on both sources the option of putting their
> stories in with
> the crossovers? Either that or by caveat declare that if a
> story uses any
> *plot* element of the films (rather than any *visual*
> element), it should be
> with the movieverse stories.
>
> On 11/29/05, Marta Layton <melayton@gmail.com> wrote:
> >
> > On 29 Nov 2005, at 11:05, dwimmer_laik wrote:
> >
> > > --- In MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com, "elanor of aquitania"
> <elanor@c...>
> > > wrote:
> > > >
> > > > > My story is:
> > > > >
> > > > > 1. Bookverse: based on the writings of J.R.R. Tolkien and/or
> > > drafts
> > > > > made available by C. Tolkien
> > > > > 2. Filmverse: based on a film adaptation of "The Lord of the
> > > Rings" or
> > > > > "The Hobbit"
> > > >
> > > > Hi all,
> > > > quickly delurking after reading that in digest
> > > > (sorry if this problem is already solved):
> > > >
> > > > what, if the story uses both verses, some sequences
> only appearing
> > > in the
> > > > book
> > > > and some scenes only appearing in the movies?
> > > >
> > > > Best wishes Elanor
> > > >
> > >
> > > I'd say make a decision--which scenes are more
> important? Is the aim
> > > to highlight and enrich the movie scenes, or are the movie scenes
> > > supporting a mostly bookverse story? We can change the
> wording to say
> > > "My story is *primarily* based on..."
> > >
> > > I'm reluctant to add "Both" as a category because I've
> not seen many
> > > book/movie blends that specifically aimed to be blends;
> most seemed to
> > > be playing to the movies and using bookverse scenes
> where the movie
> > > lacked them. I've read only a few stories that took a
> moment or two
> > > from the movie and integrated them into a bookverse
> story, but those
> > > were such minor moments for the most part that it'd be
> silly to say
> > > the story was movieverse. It made more sense to give a
> heads up in the
> > > author's notes and then leave it at that.
> > >
> >
> > I don't have any strong feelings about this, so whatever
> people want.
> > My main concern is that people who write movieverse often
> don't think
> > to warm about it in their summaries. While I think they
> should do this,
> > I don't want to deal with people thinking they got less or shorter
> > reviews because their story was movieverse and they didn't
> warn for it.
> > (And this is quite possibly old emotional baggage from when I was a
> > HASA admin.)
> >
> > Just to cover our basis, how about a warning like:
> >
> > My story is...
> >
> > ___ 1. Bookverse: based on the writings of J.R.R. Tolkien
> and/or drafts
> > made available by C. Tolkien
> > ___ 2. Filmverse: based on a film adaptation of "The Lord
> of the Rings"
> > or "The Hobbit"
> >
> > (Remember, if your story is primarily bookverse but
> contains elements
> > unique to the films, you may want to mention this in your summary or
> > authors' notes so you don't catch your readers by surprise.)
> >
> > Marta
> >
> >
> > *****
> > "Our greatest fear is not that we are inadequate. Our
> greatest fear is
> > that we are powerful beyond measure. It is our light, not
> our darkness
> > that most frightens us. [...] As we let our own light shine, we
> > unconsciously give other people permission to do the same."
> >
> > (Nelson Mandela)
> >
> >
> > ------------------------------
> > YAHOO! GROUPS LINKS
> >
> >
> > - Visit your group
> "MEFAwards<http://groups.yahoo.com/group/MEFAwards>"
> > on the web.
> >
> > - To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
> >
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hoogroups.com?subject=Unsubscribe>
> >
> > - Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to the Yahoo! Terms of
> > Service <http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/>.
> >
> >
> > ------------------------------
> >
>
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>
>
>
> ______________________________________________________________
> __________
> ______________________________________________________________
> __________
>
>
>
> --------------------------------------------------------------
> ----------
> Yahoo! Groups Links
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>
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>

Msg# 6412

Re: Movie-verse versus Bookverse (Re: Question concerning Dwim's li Posted by rabidsamfan December 01, 2005 - 7:55:35 Topic ID# 6411
On 12/1/05, elanor of aquitania <elanor@codacode.net> wrote:
>
> rabidsamfan wrote Tue, 29 Nov 2005 22:04:52 -0500:
> > drawn equally on both sources the option of putting their
> > stories in with
> > the crossovers? Either that or by caveat declare that if a
> > story uses any
> > *plot* element of the films (rather than any *visual*
> > element), it should be
> > with the movieverse stories.
>
> Hi Rabidsamfan,
>
> IMO both solutions are too strong.
>
> 1) I thought cross-overs were for the mixing of
> other movies like "Pirates of the Caribbean" with Tolkien's universe.
> IMO the movie by PJ is a story working with
> elements of Tolkien's Universe, which becomes
> towards the third part more and more AU.
>
> 2) IMO the solution that 'any *plot* element' suffices to shove
> the story into movie-verse is also too strong a measure.
>
> My question is a result of one of my own stories
> where I use PJ's pyre scene to shorten the story line
> which else is completely book-verse.
>
> I would go with caveats in the summary
> and I would like to change Dwim's text to
> something like
>
> ###########
> My story is:
>
> 1. Bookverse: *predominantly* based on the writings of J.R.R. Tolkien
> and/or
> drafts made available by C. Tolkien
>
> 2. Filmverse: *predominantly* based on a film adaptation of "The Lord of
> the
> Rings" or "The Hobbit"
> ###########
>
> Best wishes Elanor



I agree that most stories fall predominately into one 'verse or the other.
I just think there ought to be an option for authors who intended their
story to be a deliberate blending. If we're accomodating author intentions
for other questions, why not this one? Since no one seems to feel that
there should be a "both" ticky box, I was trying to think of which places
blends could go.

Crossover's not a great choice, I grant you.

If we used the "visual"/"plot" distinction, then your story would fall into
"book" if you simply used the description of the fires springing up from
mountain to mountain, but fall into "movie" if you had Gandalf and Pippin
conspiring to light the beacons, as that is a distinct plot change which
impacts the portrayal of Denethor and alters Pippin's experiences in Minas
Tirith considerably.

I suppose I'm theorizing ahead of the facts. How about a "Other, explain?"
ticky box? That might accomodate "LotR written ala Author X" and "But I
think it's both!" etc. We can always use the visual/plot distinction later
if there's only one or two stories that are odd, and explain to the authors
that we needed to place them for the sake of making viable categories.


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Msg# 6413

Re: Movie-verse versus Bookverse (Re: Question concerning Dwim's li Posted by Marta Layton December 01, 2005 - 21:37:09 Topic ID# 6411
Hi RSF,

I have to admit, the whole concept of a bookverse/movieverse hybrid
seems a bit foreign to me. If a story is bookverse, that means that on
all the points where the books differ from the movies, it follows the
books. If I write a story about Faramir's thoughts just before he rides
out to re-take Osgiliath, that story is movieverse by default - even if
I have Faramir reflecting on things that are never mentioned in the
movies, like Faramir's having the dream that sent Boromir to Osgiliath.
The movies are pretty limited in their scope, especially when it comes
to backstory.

As for why not have the possibility of marking both, there's a simple
logistical one. This year we had the "Movieverse" category as a choice.
It was in Genres, but most people want to move it to Times from what
I've seen. I certainly think it fits better there. But how would
someone put their story in movieverse using Dwim's form? The way I
interpret it, if you choose "based on the movies", your story gets
"Movie-verse" as its "Times" category choice. If you choose "based on
the books" it gets the time-period you chose as its Time choice.
Therefore it's important that the author only choose one choice.

If we don't want to do this, I guess we don't need a movieverse
category, and I don't have a strong objection from an administrative
viewpoint. I still think the concept of a hybrid doesn't make a lot of
sense as I understand the term "bookverse" and "movieverse". But I'll
go with whatever people want.

Marta

Msg# 6414

Re: Movie-verse versus Bookverse (Re: Question concerning Dwim's li Posted by rabidsamfan December 01, 2005 - 23:06:45 Topic ID# 6411
It might not matter, actually. I keep trying to think of specific examples,
but this hasn't been a good week for brain cells. Still as long as we leave
an opening for authors to let the liaisons know when they feel that the
options we've given (in whatever area) don't quite fit the way they see
their stories, it should be sufficient to show us if there is a topic where
our planning hasn't matched the expectations of others. One of the
strengths of the MEFAs is inclusivity, and asking people what they think, as
this discussion certainly proves.

An evil little braincell in the back of my head just wondered whether or not
we'd count a story with Bingo Baggins and Trotter as alternate
universe... They do come from HoME, after all, and while I'm far too sleepy
to go looking at the list as it stands, I thought that HoME was in the
bookverse part of the stuff...



On 12/1/05, Marta Layton <melayton@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> Hi RSF,
>
> I have to admit, the whole concept of a bookverse/movieverse hybrid
> seems a bit foreign to me. If a story is bookverse, that means that on
> all the points where the books differ from the movies, it follows the
> books. If I write a story about Faramir's thoughts just before he rides
> out to re-take Osgiliath, that story is movieverse by default - even if
> I have Faramir reflecting on things that are never mentioned in the
> movies, like Faramir's having the dream that sent Boromir to Osgiliath.
> The movies are pretty limited in their scope, especially when it comes
> to backstory.
>
> As for why not have the possibility of marking both, there's a simple
> logistical one. This year we had the "Movieverse" category as a choice.
> It was in Genres, but most people want to move it to Times from what
> I've seen. I certainly think it fits better there. But how would
> someone put their story in movieverse using Dwim's form? The way I
> interpret it, if you choose "based on the movies", your story gets
> "Movie-verse" as its "Times" category choice. If you choose "based on
> the books" it gets the time-period you chose as its Time choice.
> Therefore it's important that the author only choose one choice.
>
> If we don't want to do this, I guess we don't need a movieverse
> category, and I don't have a strong objection from an administrative
> viewpoint. I still think the concept of a hybrid doesn't make a lot of
> sense as I understand the term "bookverse" and "movieverse". But I'll
> go with whatever people want.
>
> Marta
>
>
> ------------------------------
> YAHOO! GROUPS LINKS
>
>
> - Visit your group "MEFAwards<http://groups.yahoo.com/group/MEFAwards>"
> on the web.
>
> - To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
> MEFAwards-unsubscribe@yahoogroups.com<MEFAwards-unsubscribe@yahoogroups.com?subject=Unsubscribe>
>
> - Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to the Yahoo! Terms of
> Service <http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/>.
>
>
> ------------------------------
>


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Msg# 6415

Movie-verse versus Bookverse (Re: Question concerning Dwim's list) Posted by Kathy December 02, 2005 - 0:11:29 Topic ID# 6411
--- In MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com, rabidsamfan <rabidsamfan@v...> wrote:
>
> <snip>
> An evil little braincell in the back of my head just wondered whether
> or not we'd count a story with Bingo Baggins and Trotter as alternate
> universe...

HAS anyone ever written a story with Bingo Baggins and Trotter? Now
*that* I'd like to see! ;)

Kathy (Inkling)

Msg# 6416

Re: Movie-verse versus Bookverse (Re: Question concerning Dwim's li Posted by Laura December 02, 2005 - 0:50:48 Topic ID# 6411
-- Marta Layton <melayton@gmail.com> wrote:
>> I have to admit, the whole concept of a bookverse/movieverse hybrid
>> seems a bit foreign to me. If a story is bookverse, that means that
>> on all the points where the books differ from the movies, it
>> follows the books. If I write a story about Faramir's thoughts just
>> before he rides out to re-take Osgiliath, that story is movieverse
>> by default - even if I have Faramir reflecting on things that are
>> never mentioned in the movies, like Faramir's having the dream that
>> sent Boromir to Osgiliath. The movies are pretty limited in their
>> scope, especially when it comes to backstory.

I've been wondering about this hybrid concept, and I *can* think of a few examples that might fall under such a category. There's one story out there in which the Lothlorien elves never showed up at Helm's Deep and Haldir never died. He has a fairly big role in the story, and on that count, it's a bookverse story. However, a lot of the lines and a lot of the flashbacks come straight out of the movies and don't have much to do with the books at all. The author did something of a pick-and-choose job, using elements from both the books and the movies until she got something that worked. But even so, I think with a bit of prodding it could be narrowed down into a bookverse or a movieverse category.

The other examples would are all parodies that use movies and books against each other, and I can think of quite a few of those. But by and large, they're probably going in the humor section rather than in a time category or a movieverse category.

Anyway, just wanted to point out that there are a few stories out there that try to blend movies and books. And there are a few that try to reconcile movies and books. My opinion is that all of them (at least, all of the stories I've read) can fit into bookverse or movieverse with a bit of wrangling. I don't see an overwhelming need for a hybrid option. But that's just my opinion.

Thundera

~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~
--Okay, I'll make a deal with you: If we go out
on patrol and Gotham is quiet with no sign of
the Joker, we come back here, have Christmas
dinner, and watch ýItýs a Wonderful Life.ý
--You know, Iýve never seen that. I could never
get past the title.

Robin and Batman - Batman: The Animated Series
~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~

Msg# 6417

Re: Movie-verse versus Bookverse (Re: Question concerning Dwim's li Posted by MarigoldCotton@aol.com December 02, 2005 - 1:38:22 Topic ID# 6411
For what it is worth, just as an example, almost all of Budgielover's fics are a combination of bookverse and movieverse. She takes elements from each for her universe.

Marigold


>-- Marta Layton <melayton@gmail.com> wrote:
>>> I have to admit, the whole concept of a bookverse/movieverse hybrid
>>> seems a bit foreign to me. If a story is bookverse, that means that
>>> on all the points where the books differ from the movies, it
>>> follows the books. If I write a story about Faramir's thoughts just
>>> before he rides out to re-take Osgiliath, that story is movieverse
>>> by default - even if I have Faramir reflecting on things that are
>>> never mentioned in the movies, like Faramir's having the dream that
>>> sent Boromir to Osgiliath. The movies are pretty limited in their
>>> scope, especially when it comes to backstory.
>
>I've been wondering about this hybrid concept, and I *can* think of a few examples that might fall under such a category. There's one story out there in which the Lothlorien elves never showed up at Helm's Deep and Haldir never died. He has a fairly big role in the story, and on that count, it's a bookverse story. However, a lot of the lines and a lot of the flashbacks come straight out of the movies and don't have much to do with the books at all. The author did something of a pick-and-choose job, using elements from both the books and the movies until she got something that worked. But even so, I think with a bit of prodding it could be narrowed down into a bookverse or a movieverse category.
>
>The other examples would are all parodies that use movies and books against each other, and I can think of quite a few of those. But by and large, they're probably going in the humor section rather than in a time category or a movieverse category.
>
>Anyway, just wanted to point out that there are a few stories out there that try to blend movies and books. And there are a few that try to reconcile movies and books. My opinion is that all of them (at least, all of the stories I've read) can fit into bookverse or movieverse with a bit of wrangling. I don't see an overwhelming need for a hybrid option. But that's just my opinion.
>
>Thundera
>
>~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~
>--Okay, I'll make a deal with you: If we go out
>   on patrol and Gotham is quiet with no sign of
>   the Joker, we come back here, have Christmas
>   dinner, and watch “It’s a Wonderful Life.”
>--You know, I’ve never seen that. I could never
>   get past the title.
>
>Robin and Batman - Batman: The Animated Series
>~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~
>
>
>
>
>
>Yahoo! Groups Links
>
>
>
>
>
>
>


--
Marigold's Red Book
http://marigold.tolkienshire.com

Marigold's Recommendations Page
http://www.geocities.com/marigoldsrecommendations/

Marigold's Live Journal
http://www.livejournal.com/users/marigoldg/

Tales of The Red Book
http://www.livejournal.com/users/talesofredbook/




There, peeping among the cloud-wrack above a dark tor high up in the mountains, Sam saw a white star twinkle for a while. The beauty of it smote his heart, as he looked up out of the forsaken land, and hope returned to him. For like a shaft, clear and cold, the thought pierced him that in the end the Shadow was only a small and passing thing: there was light and high beauty forever beyond its reach.
>
>Sam, in Mordor, RoTK

Msg# 6418

movieverse Posted by Marta Layton December 02, 2005 - 6:43:19 Topic ID# 6418
Hey guys,

I've got to run, and will try to answer these posts tonight. But for
me, as an administrator, the main questions are:

1. Do we still want a Movieverse question?
2. Do we want it to be in Times instead of Genres?
3. If the answer to (2) and (1) is yes, how does an author choose that
using Dwim's form?

Thanks for your thoughts, btw! You're making me reconsider how I
thought about the term "movieverse".

Marta)

Msg# 6419

Re: movieverse Posted by dwimmer\_laik December 02, 2005 - 10:30:01 Topic ID# 6418
--- In MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com, Marta Layton <melayton@g...> wrote:
>
> Hey guys,
>
> I've got to run, and will try to answer these posts tonight. But for
> me, as an administrator, the main questions are:
>
> 1. Do we still want a Movieverse question?
> 2. Do we want it to be in Times instead of Genres?
> 3. If the answer to (2) and (1) is yes, how does an author choose that
> using Dwim's form?
>
> Thanks for your thoughts, btw! You're making me reconsider how I
> thought about the term "movieverse".
>
> Marta)
>

Remember too that the reason for including the question "Bookverse or
movieverse" was to create a times category that could be separated out
from a set of categories based on *source material*. If we have to
list every single book, movie, and what not, and consider how to
officially accommodate Bingo Baggins and Trotter, then I think we risk
making categories that are too idiosynchratic to be viable, and that
will annoy anyone who actually did choose that category but whose
story then had to be folded back into some more general category.

For Bingo Baggins and Trotter, I'd fill out the form like this
(cutting out the portions of the form irrelevant or indeterminable for
this discussion):

Title: The Great Adventure of Bingo Baggins and Trotter
Author: Dwym the Evil Twin
Summary: An AU to LOTR, based on the drafts of that story provided in
"Return of the Shadow." Bingo Baggins thought himself a right
comfortable hobbit until a mysterious wanderer named Trotter appeared
one day... (see author's notes for more details).

Warnings (please enter warnings you feel are appropriate): Requires
some knowledge of HoME drafts.

My story is:

1. Bookverse: based on the writings of J.R.R. Tolkien and/or drafts
made available by C. Tolkien

My story is:

1. Fiction

<snip>

MAIN CATEGORIES

Please choose *one* and *only one* from each of the following lists.
Your responses will help us to try to place your story in a MEFA
category that is most appropriate.

A. Which of these time periods is your story based in?

5. Late Third Age: Stories set between TA 2900 and TA 3017. Stories in
this category may include stories based around The Hobbit or about the
childhood of the characters of LOTR.


B. Which of these genres best describes your story?


2. Alternate Universe



Even without making drastic category changes, the form can accommodate
authors of stories based on Tolkien's drafts. Remember that the author
has control over the summary and warnings (now that we've moved back
to the original coding for warnings and romantic partners). That eases
confusion on the reader end and I think gives flexibility enough that
the form would not be misleading.

For a movieverse blend, I'd say let's give it a try: pick some
"blends" and see how they work when you fill out the form. Or do we
have authors of such fics who could give us a test run?

Here's the revised form, btw.


STORY FORM: Please read *all* instructions, and complete all fields to
the extent required.

BASICS

Title: [already provided]
Author: [already provided]
Summary: [author provides]
Rating (if incorrect, please change): [MEFA drop-down]
Warnings (please enter warnings you feel are appropriate)
Romantic pairings (please see <link>'that which must be
identified"</link> for explanation and options):
URL (if not preferred site, please replace): [provided by nominator]

Please choose *one* and *only one* from each of the following three lists:

My story is:

1. Bookverse: based on the writings of J.R.R. Tolkien and/or drafts
made available by C. Tolkien
2. Filmverse: based on a film adaptation of "The Lord of the Rings" or
"The Hobbit"

My story is:

1. Fiction
2. Non-fiction (if non-fiction, please skip to number 8 in
"Subcategories")


My story is best described as a...

1. Drabble (100 words exactly, plus 15 for title)
2. Drabble cycle (a series of individual drabbles connected by some theme)
3. Ficlet (101 up to, but not including, 500 words)
4. Short Story (500-10,000 words)
5. Novella (10,001-50,000 words)
6. Novel (>50,000 words)
7. Poem (any length)


MAIN CATEGORIES

Please choose *one* and *only one* from each of the following lists.
Your responses will help us to try to place your story in a MEFA
category that is most appropriate.

A. Which of these time periods is your story based in?

1. Before the end of the First Age - anything before the overthrow of
Morgoth.

2. The Second Age - anything between the overthrow of Morgoth and the
Last Alliance.

3. The early Third Age - anything during the Third Age before the quest
for Erebor.

4. Early Third Age: Stories set in the Third Age before 2900. These
stories should draw from the histories of the cultures of Middle-earth,
and in most cases will not involve characters who feature into "The
Lord of the Rings".

5. Late Third Age: Stories set between TA 2900 and TA 3017. Stories in
this category may include stories based around The Hobbit or about the
childhood of the characters of LOTR.

6. The Great Years: Stories set between TA 3018 and TA 3022. These
stories should be set around events like the Quest to destroy the Ring,
pre-war politics in Rohan and Gondor, the occupation of the Shire, the
War of the Ring itself, and the aftermath of the Ring War before the
Ring-bearers sailed West.

7. Fourth Age and Beyond - Stories about the events including but also
following the sailing of the Ring Bearers, or crossovers between
Middle-earth and the modern world.


B. Which of these genres best describes your story?

1. Action/Adventure
2. Alternate Universe
3. Crossover
4. Drama (includes Angst)
5. Horror
6. Humor
7. Mystery
8. Romance

C. Which of the following types of characters would you say is the
primary focus of your story?

1. Dwarves
2. Elves
3. Ents
4. Hobbits
5. Men
6. Valar/Ainur
7. Villains
8. Other
9. Story specifically interested in depicting and examining
interspecies interactions


D. Rank your category choices. In which of the above categories would
you *most prefer* your story to compete? Please list your first
category choice first, and your last category choice third (e.g., A,
C, B).



SUBCATEGORIES

Please fill in the following information/[Please select the following
from the drop-down lists provided or, if necessary, input the required
information in the "Other" textbox.] Your responses will help MEFA
categorizers create subcategories, subject to subcategory viability
rules. [webform: If answering a question would serve as a spoiler to
your story, please check the box "Decline to answer."]

1. Where does your story primarily take place, or about which place
does your story revolve (e.g., Gondolin, Houses of Healing, Beleriand,
Rohan, The Angle, The Shire, Angband etc.)? Please limit yourself to
four or fewer main places.


2. Who are your *main* characters, in order of priority? (Acknowledged
groups such as "Fellowship", "Ringbearers", "Feanorians", etc., also
useful here.) Please limit yourself to four or fewer main
characters/groups of characters.


3. Which time periods does the story primarily take place in/focus on
(e.g., First Age, Time of Trees, Fourth Age, etc.)? Please limit
yourself to four or fewer times.


4. If your story is based on filmed versions of Tolkien's work, which
film/set of films is it based on?

5. Is there a major canonical event around which your story revolves
(e.g., Akallabeth, destruction of Sirion, making of Khazad-dûm, Battle
of Unnumbered Tears, etc.)? Please limit yourself to four or fewer events.

6. Is there a particular subgenre or form commonly used in fandom or
film/literature that you think is applicable to and a good description
of your story that isn't represented above (e.g., metafic, noir,
pastische, filk, etc.)?

7. If your story is a poem, what is its form (e.g., haiku, tanka,
terzanelle, sonnet, free verse etc.)?


8. If your story is non-fiction, what is its main topic?


9. If your story is non-fiction, is it an essay (offering
interpretation) or an article (research article meant to assist others
by gathering and presenting useful facts, but without offering an
interpretation)?


ATTENTION, MEFA CATEGORIZERS!

Have any of the questions in the CATEGORIES or SUBCATEGORIES sections
required you to reveal information that would effectively serve as a
spoiler for your story, and which you would prefer not to have
considered when categories and subcategories are formed? Please
indicate this by writing, for example, SUBCATEGORIES, #2.

[webform version: see revised instructions above]

Msg# 6420

Re: movieverse Posted by dwimmer\_laik December 02, 2005 - 10:35:48 Topic ID# 6418
Whoops!

> Please choose *one* and *only one* from each of the following three
lists:
>
> My story is:
>
> 1. Bookverse: based on the writings of J.R.R. Tolkien and/or drafts
> made available by C. Tolkien
> 2. Filmverse: based on a film adaptation of "The Lord of the Rings" or
> "The Hobbit"

That should read: "My story is *predominantly*:"

Dwim

Msg# 6421

Re: movieverse Posted by Kathy December 02, 2005 - 13:32:11 Topic ID# 6418
Hi Dwim,

Your revised form currently lists two "early Third Age"
categories...I think you meant to delete the first one? Also, in
subcategories # 3, I think we wanted to remove examples like First
Age and Fourth Age, as they are already listed as main categories,
and maybe add language like "which time periods *not listed
above*"...etc. Time of Trees is a good example; others could include
pre-Quest, War of the Ring, etc.

Kathy (Inkling)

ps--I greatly look forward to Dwym the Evil Twin's story, "The Great
Adventure of Bingo Baggins and Trotter."

--- In MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com, "dwimmer_laik" <dwimmer_laik@y...>
wrote:
>
> --- In MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com, Marta Layton <melayton@g...>
wrote:
> >
> > Hey guys,
> >
> > I've got to run, and will try to answer these posts tonight. But
for
> > me, as an administrator, the main questions are:
> >
> > 1. Do we still want a Movieverse question?
> > 2. Do we want it to be in Times instead of Genres?
> > 3. If the answer to (2) and (1) is yes, how does an author choose
that
> > using Dwim's form?
> >
> > Thanks for your thoughts, btw! You're making me reconsider how I
> > thought about the term "movieverse".
> >
> > Marta)
> >
>
> Remember too that the reason for including the question "Bookverse
or
> movieverse" was to create a times category that could be separated
out
> from a set of categories based on *source material*. If we have to
> list every single book, movie, and what not, and consider how to
> officially accommodate Bingo Baggins and Trotter, then I think we
risk
> making categories that are too idiosynchratic to be viable, and that
> will annoy anyone who actually did choose that category but whose
> story then had to be folded back into some more general category.
>
> For Bingo Baggins and Trotter, I'd fill out the form like this
> (cutting out the portions of the form irrelevant or indeterminable
for
> this discussion):
>
> Title: The Great Adventure of Bingo Baggins and Trotter
> Author: Dwym the Evil Twin
> Summary: An AU to LOTR, based on the drafts of that story provided
in
> "Return of the Shadow." Bingo Baggins thought himself a right
> comfortable hobbit until a mysterious wanderer named Trotter
appeared
> one day... (see author's notes for more details).
>
> Warnings (please enter warnings you feel are appropriate): Requires
> some knowledge of HoME drafts.
>
> My story is:
>
> 1. Bookverse: based on the writings of J.R.R. Tolkien and/or drafts
> made available by C. Tolkien
>
> My story is:
>
> 1. Fiction
>
> <snip>
>
> MAIN CATEGORIES
>
> Please choose *one* and *only one* from each of the following lists.
> Your responses will help us to try to place your story in a MEFA
> category that is most appropriate.
>
> A. Which of these time periods is your story based in?
>
> 5. Late Third Age: Stories set between TA 2900 and TA 3017. Stories
in
> this category may include stories based around The Hobbit or about
the
> childhood of the characters of LOTR.
>
>
> B. Which of these genres best describes your story?
>
>
> 2. Alternate Universe
>
>
>
> Even without making drastic category changes, the form can
accommodate
> authors of stories based on Tolkien's drafts. Remember that the
author
> has control over the summary and warnings (now that we've moved back
> to the original coding for warnings and romantic partners). That
eases
> confusion on the reader end and I think gives flexibility enough
that
> the form would not be misleading.
>
> For a movieverse blend, I'd say let's give it a try: pick some
> "blends" and see how they work when you fill out the form. Or do we
> have authors of such fics who could give us a test run?
>
> Here's the revised form, btw.
>
>
> STORY FORM: Please read *all* instructions, and complete all fields
to
> the extent required.
>
> BASICS
>
> Title: [already provided]
> Author: [already provided]
> Summary: [author provides]
> Rating (if incorrect, please change): [MEFA drop-down]
> Warnings (please enter warnings you feel are appropriate)
> Romantic pairings (please see <link>'that which must be
> identified"</link> for explanation and options):
> URL (if not preferred site, please replace): [provided by nominator]
>
> Please choose *one* and *only one* from each of the following three
lists:
>
> My story is:
>
> 1. Bookverse: based on the writings of J.R.R. Tolkien and/or drafts
> made available by C. Tolkien
> 2. Filmverse: based on a film adaptation of "The Lord of the Rings"
or
> "The Hobbit"
>
> My story is:
>
> 1. Fiction
> 2. Non-fiction (if non-fiction, please skip to number 8 in
> "Subcategories")
>
>
> My story is best described as a...
>
> 1. Drabble (100 words exactly, plus 15 for title)
> 2. Drabble cycle (a series of individual drabbles connected by some
theme)
> 3. Ficlet (101 up to, but not including, 500 words)
> 4. Short Story (500-10,000 words)
> 5. Novella (10,001-50,000 words)
> 6. Novel (>50,000 words)
> 7. Poem (any length)
>
>
> MAIN CATEGORIES
>
> Please choose *one* and *only one* from each of the following lists.
> Your responses will help us to try to place your story in a MEFA
> category that is most appropriate.
>
> A. Which of these time periods is your story based in?
>
> 1. Before the end of the First Age - anything before the overthrow
of
> Morgoth.
>
> 2. The Second Age - anything between the overthrow of Morgoth and
the
> Last Alliance.
>
> 3. The early Third Age - anything during the Third Age before the
quest
> for Erebor.
>
> 4. Early Third Age: Stories set in the Third Age before 2900. These
> stories should draw from the histories of the cultures of Middle-
earth,
> and in most cases will not involve characters who feature into "The
> Lord of the Rings".
>
> 5. Late Third Age: Stories set between TA 2900 and TA 3017. Stories
in
> this category may include stories based around The Hobbit or about
the
> childhood of the characters of LOTR.
>
> 6. The Great Years: Stories set between TA 3018 and TA 3022. These
> stories should be set around events like the Quest to destroy the
Ring,
> pre-war politics in Rohan and Gondor, the occupation of the Shire,
the
> War of the Ring itself, and the aftermath of the Ring War before the
> Ring-bearers sailed West.
>
> 7. Fourth Age and Beyond - Stories about the events including but
also
> following the sailing of the Ring Bearers, or crossovers between
> Middle-earth and the modern world.
>
>
> B. Which of these genres best describes your story?
>
> 1. Action/Adventure
> 2. Alternate Universe
> 3. Crossover
> 4. Drama (includes Angst)
> 5. Horror
> 6. Humor
> 7. Mystery
> 8. Romance
>
> C. Which of the following types of characters would you say is the
> primary focus of your story?
>
> 1. Dwarves
> 2. Elves
> 3. Ents
> 4. Hobbits
> 5. Men
> 6. Valar/Ainur
> 7. Villains
> 8. Other
> 9. Story specifically interested in depicting and examining
> interspecies interactions
>
>
> D. Rank your category choices. In which of the above categories
would
> you *most prefer* your story to compete? Please list your first
> category choice first, and your last category choice third (e.g., A,
> C, B).
>
>
>
> SUBCATEGORIES
>
> Please fill in the following information/[Please select the
following
> from the drop-down lists provided or, if necessary, input the
required
> information in the "Other" textbox.] Your responses will help MEFA
> categorizers create subcategories, subject to subcategory viability
> rules. [webform: If answering a question would serve as a spoiler to
> your story, please check the box "Decline to answer."]
>
> 1. Where does your story primarily take place, or about which place
> does your story revolve (e.g., Gondolin, Houses of Healing,
Beleriand,
> Rohan, The Angle, The Shire, Angband etc.)? Please limit yourself to
> four or fewer main places.
>
>
> 2. Who are your *main* characters, in order of priority?
(Acknowledged
> groups such as "Fellowship", "Ringbearers", "Feanorians", etc., also
> useful here.) Please limit yourself to four or fewer main
> characters/groups of characters.
>
>
> 3. Which time periods does the story primarily take place in/focus
on
> (e.g., First Age, Time of Trees, Fourth Age, etc.)? Please limit
> yourself to four or fewer times.
>
>
> 4. If your story is based on filmed versions of Tolkien's work,
which
> film/set of films is it based on?
>
> 5. Is there a major canonical event around which your story revolves
> (e.g., Akallabeth, destruction of Sirion, making of Khazad-dûm,
Battle
> of Unnumbered Tears, etc.)? Please limit yourself to four or fewer
events.
>
> 6. Is there a particular subgenre or form commonly used in fandom or
> film/literature that you think is applicable to and a good
description
> of your story that isn't represented above (e.g., metafic, noir,
> pastische, filk, etc.)?
>
> 7. If your story is a poem, what is its form (e.g., haiku, tanka,
> terzanelle, sonnet, free verse etc.)?
>
>
> 8. If your story is non-fiction, what is its main topic?
>
>
> 9. If your story is non-fiction, is it an essay (offering
> interpretation) or an article (research article meant to assist
others
> by gathering and presenting useful facts, but without offering an
> interpretation)?
>
>
> ATTENTION, MEFA CATEGORIZERS!
>
> Have any of the questions in the CATEGORIES or SUBCATEGORIES
sections
> required you to reveal information that would effectively serve as a
> spoiler for your story, and which you would prefer not to have
> considered when categories and subcategories are formed? Please
> indicate this by writing, for example, SUBCATEGORIES, #2.
>
> [webform version: see revised instructions above]
>

Msg# 6422

Re: movieverse Posted by Marta Layton December 02, 2005 - 18:28:12 Topic ID# 6418
Hi Dwim,

On 2 Dec 2005, at 11:29, dwimmer_laik wrote:

> --- In MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com, Marta Layton <melayton@g...> wrote:
> >
> > Hey guys,
> >
> > I've got to run, and will try to answer these posts tonight. But for
> > me, as an administrator, the main questions are:
> >
> > 1. Do we still want a Movieverse question?

Ugh. In my rush I meant to type "Do we still want a movieverse
*category*." Sorry if that wasn't clear.

> > 2. Do we want it to be in Times instead of Genres?
> > 3. If the answer to (2) and (1) is yes, how does an author choose
> that
> > using Dwim's form?
> >
> > Thanks for your thoughts, btw! You're making me reconsider how I
> > thought about the term "movieverse".
> >
> > Marta)
> >
>
> Remember too that the reason for including the question "Bookverse or
> movieverse" was to create a times category that could be separated out
> from a set of categories based on *source material*. If we have to
> list every single book, movie, and what not, and consider how to
> officially accommodate Bingo Baggins and Trotter, then I think we risk
> making categories that are too idiosynchratic to be viable, and that
> will annoy anyone who actually did choose that category but whose
> story then had to be folded back into some more general category.
>

More than that, I think it makes the thing unnecessarily complicated. I
don't want to go that route.

I think people are expecting this question to do one of two things
(what else is new around here): warn the reader about unexpected
movie-inspired content, and form a category. But I'm actually wondering
if this question might be better under subcategories. Then we could
have a possible "movieverse" subcategory in "Great Years", and if there
are enough graduate it from there.

For this purpose, the question would be something like:

*****

Is this story based primarily on an adaptation of JRR Tolkien's work
such as the Jackson or Bakshi films? If you select "Yes" it may be
placed in a subcategory with other movieverse stories. (Movie-inspired
stories are also eligible for all other stories.) If you do not want
your story placed in this sub-category, please select "Decline to
Answer" and mention in your story summary that it is movie-verse.

Yes
No
Decline to answer

*****

> STORY FORM: Please read *all* instructions, and complete all fields to
> the extent required.
>
> <snip>
> A. Which of these time periods is your story based in?
>
> <snip>
> 3. The early Third Age - anything during the Third Age before the
> quest
> for Erebor.
>
> 4. Early Third Age: Stories set in the Third Age before 2900. These
> stories should draw from the histories of the cultures of
> Middle-earth,
> and in most cases will not involve characters who feature into "The
> Lord of the Rings".
>

Do we need both of these? I'd go with #4.

> SUBCATEGORIES
>
> <snip>
> 3. Which time periods does the story primarily take place in/focus on
> (e.g., First Age, Time of Trees, Fourth Age, etc.)? Please limit
> yourself to four or fewer times.
>
> 5. Is there a major canonical event around which your story revolves
> (e.g., Akallabeth, destruction of Sirion, making of Khazad-dûm, Battle
> of Unnumbered Tears, etc.)? Please limit yourself to four or fewer
> events.
>

If we're going to have #3, I'd suggest making sure the examples are
more specific than the main categories. I'd actually recommend
combining the two:

Is your story set in a certain time period or around a certain event
(e.g., Time of the Trees, Akallabeth, Council of Elrond)? Please limit
yourself to four or fewer events, and please do not list time periods
that are also listed above as main categories.

Marta

Msg# 6423

Re: movieverse Posted by dwimmer\_laik December 02, 2005 - 18:35:38 Topic ID# 6418
--- In MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com, "Kathy" <inkling-tcbs@s...> wrote:
>
> Hi Dwim,
>
> Your revised form currently lists two "early Third Age"
> categories...I think you meant to delete the first one? Also, in
> subcategories # 3, I think we wanted to remove examples like First
> Age and Fourth Age, as they are already listed as main categories,
> and maybe add language like "which time periods *not listed
> above*"...etc. Time of Trees is a good example; others could include
> pre-Quest, War of the Ring, etc.

D'oh! *sigh* It's what happens when you update on the fly. Sorry about
all that, I've fixed it on the Word doc.


> Kathy (Inkling)
>
> ps--I greatly look forward to Dwym the Evil Twin's story, "The Great
> Adventure of Bingo Baggins and Trotter."

Granted the Trotter-Aragorn connection could be a way in for me, I'm
hoping this little fangful of fun will latch onto someone else's ankle...

Dwim

Msg# 6424

Re: Movie-verse versus Bookverse (Re: Question concerning Dwim's l Posted by Marta Layton December 02, 2005 - 19:21:23 Topic ID# 6411
Hi Thundera,

>>> I have to admit, the whole concept of a bookverse/movieverse hybrid
>>> seems a bit foreign to me. If a story is bookverse, that means that
>>> on all the points where the books differ from the movies, it
>>> follows the books. If I write a story about Faramir's thoughts just
>>> before he rides out to re-take Osgiliath, that story is movieverse
>>> by default - even if I have Faramir reflecting on things that are
>>> never mentioned in the movies, like Faramir's having the dream that
>>> sent Boromir to Osgiliath. The movies are pretty limited in their
>>> scope, especially when it comes to backstory.
>
> I've been wondering about this hybrid concept, and I *can* think of a
> few examples that might fall under such a category. There's one story
> out there in which the Lothlorien elves never showed up at Helm's Deep
> and Haldir never died. He has a fairly big role in the story, and on
> that count, it's a bookverse story. However, a lot of the lines and a
> lot of the flashbacks come straight out of the movies and don't have
> much to do with the books at all. The author did something of a
> pick-and-choose job, using elements from both the books and the movies
> until she got something that worked. But even so, I think with a bit
> of prodding it could be narrowed down into a bookverse or a movieverse
> category.
>

Okay, I can see that argument. To my mind, if Tolkien never gave us the
exact wording of that quote (and the movies are different), then this
doesn't keep it from being bookverse. To my mind the questions are:

1. Is the story completely consistent with the books?

a. Yes --> bookverse
b. No --> Go to #2.

2. Where the story is different from the books, is it instead following
the movie's version of events?

a. Yes --> movieverse
b. No --> AU

So a story where the hobbits pass through the barrows but aren't taken
by the wight is definitely not consistent with the books. But it's not
really movieverse, either, because it's not like the author is
specifically going with the movies' version instead. I'd label this AU.

On the other hand, a story where Arwen rides out to meet Aragorn +
hobbits isn't consistent with the books, but it's going with the
movies' version of events, so it's a movieverse story.

But I can see your point. That's why I suggested asking whether a story
was or wasn't movieverse -- if the author think there's enough of the
movies to label it as movieverse they can do that, even if there's
stuff from the books there, too.

Marta

Msg# 6425

Re: Movie-verse versus Bookverse (Re: Question concerning Dwim's li Posted by Marta Layton December 02, 2005 - 19:35:35 Topic ID# 6411
On 2 Dec 2005, at 00:06, rabidsamfan wrote:

> It might not matter, actually.  I keep trying to think of specific
> examples,
> but this hasn't been a good week for brain cells.  Still as long as
> we leave
> an opening for authors to let the liaisons know when they feel that
> the
> options we've given (in whatever area) don't quite fit the way they
> see
> their stories, it should be sufficient to show us if there is a topic
> where
> our planning hasn't matched the expectations of others.  One of the
> strengths of the MEFAs is inclusivity, and asking people what they
> think, as
> this discussion certainly proves.
>

The main problem I have with giving people the option to choose both is
the problem with sorting stories into a "movieverse" category. If we
can do that some other way, I don't mind having this option - I'm not
particularly for it, I just don't have strong feelings.

Marta

Msg# 6426

Re: Movie-verse versus Bookverse (Re: Question concerning Dwim's li Posted by rabidsamfan December 02, 2005 - 21:50:15 Topic ID# 6411
If every author agrees that their story is one or the other it's no biggie,
but I think it's possible that some authors will balk at having to choose to
cram what they've written one direction or the other. And since we're using
source information to group similar stories together there's room for some
flexibility. If nine stories come in where the authors say that they've
blended film and book deliberately, that's enough for a "Great Years -
blends of book and film" group. But if there are only three authors who say
"it's a blend" then those stories could be assorted into more precise
times, eg, one each into "Battle of Helm's Deep", "Journey down the Great
River" and "Cormallen". How the final assortment will work out is going to
depend on the stories which are nominated, because it's impossible to
predict numbers. But good data is everything. It doesn't hurt to ask
authors what they think.

<omits long paragraph about how she splits the material down because it
would just turn into a wrangle>




On 12/2/05, Marta Layton <melayton@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>
>
> The main problem I have with giving people the option to choose both is
> the problem with sorting stories into a "movieverse" category. If we
> can do that some other way, I don't mind having this option - I'm not
> particularly for it, I just don't have strong feelings.
>
> Marta
>
>
>


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Msg# 6427

Re: movieverse Posted by ejackamack@aol.com December 03, 2005 - 7:43:24 Topic ID# 6418
In a message dated 12/2/2005 7:36:06 P.M. Eastern Standard Time,
dwimmer_laik@yahoo.com writes:

Granted the Trotter-Aragorn connection could be a way in for me, I'm
hoping this little fangful of fun will latch onto someone else's ankle...

Dwim
I think Soledad's actually played with it, but I can't remember if she
posted the results anywhere.

Isabeau







[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Msg# 6428

Re: Movie-verse versus Bookverse (Re: Question concerning Dwim's li Posted by Marta Layton December 03, 2005 - 10:52:46 Topic ID# 6411
Hi RSF,

On 2 Dec 2005, at 22:50, rabidsamfan wrote:

> If every author agrees that their story is one or the other it's no
> biggie,
> but I think it's possible that some authors will balk at having to
> choose to
> cram what they've written one direction or the other.  And since
> we're using
> source information to group similar stories together there's room for
> some
> flexibility. 

This is why I suggested framing the question differently: is the story
movieverse or not? If the author thinks there's enough movieverse in it
for it to compete with movieverse stories, they select yes, even if
there's a fair bit of bookverse in there as well. We could phrase it as
something like "Is your story based on some adaptation of Tolkien's
work like the movies made by Jackson or Bakshi. Select "yes" even if
your story also draws from Tolkien's books if you would like it to
compete with other movieverse stories. If you do not want it to compete
in a movieverse category [or sub-category, whatever we go with], please
select "Decline to answer" and mention that it draws from the movies in
your summary."

My concern with giving people a book/movie/splice option is that the
splice stories won't go in with the movieverse categories even if the
author might put it there. I had a story entered in this year's
movieverse category ("Fell Deeds, Awake") that had Gimli at Helm's Deep
comparing Theoden to Bard. It was movieverse because Gimli was the one
who blew Helm Hammerhand's horn, and I still think that was the right
category for it -- but if I had the option of marking it as a
combination of bookverse and movieverse, I probably would have chosen a
blend. I don't want that to happen to other people this year.

Just my thoughts, of course. If most people want to accommodate splices
this way I won't fight it. Would people like a poll on this?

Marta

Msg# 6429

Re: Movie-verse versus Bookverse (Re: Question concerning Dwim's li Posted by rabidsamfan December 03, 2005 - 17:32:03 Topic ID# 6411
See, I'd call that a blend right off the bat, as Bard is drawn strictly from
the books and Gimli blowing the horn is definitely from the film, and the
story is doing its best to bind those two things into a single whole. You,
I gather, feel that any hint of the films moves the story into the
movieverse, and even want authors to mention if there are moviebits in
summaries, almost like a warning for unpleasant topics or character deaths.


Part of the problem, I guess, is that I don't ask that question first. And
it is the first question on Dwim's form.

To quote:

[My story is:

1. Bookverse: based on the writings of J.R.R. Tolkien and/or drafts
made available by C. Tolkien
2. Filmverse: based on a film adaptation of "The Lord of the Rings" or
"The Hobbit"...]

Now when I think "Bookverse" I don't include anything from Tolkien's letters
or HoME, or even Unfinished Tales. If I were better acquainted with the
Silmarillion, I'd definitely include that in my thinking, but mostly I think
of The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings (and in their "most corrected" form,
at that) as being the basic canon of the Bookverse.

HoME, the Letters, etc., are in my noggin as "drafts and background
material".



The films (and for that matter, the audio performances by people like the
BBC), are "adaptations", some of which would clearly be Alternate Universes
if they were fanfic.



And of course there Alternate Universes of the usual variety as well, which
for me are always stories that try to answer "what if some factor were
changed" and extrapolate forward.

Except for some of the Alternate Universe/Crossover type stories, where
Frodo is living in modern New York and Sam is the building superintendent,
most fanfic falls within a scope of Time and Place which is consistent with
JRRT's published works.

So what if we skip that question for now, and save it for later. Now we
have two primary questions on the form (and again, they're not in the form
I'd divide things.)... Hmm. I can see that what I really need to do is
explain how I would do it if I were in charge of the universe.

Okay. Might take me a day or so, depending on the insomnia. I'll go hunt
up Dwim's most current form of the form and see if I can make a coherent
contribution. Not that I expect it to be used, mind you, but so you can see
how I'm thinking.


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Msg# 6430

Movie-verse versus Bookverse (Re: Question concerning Dwim's list) Posted by dwimmer\_laik December 03, 2005 - 18:49:00 Topic ID# 6411
--- In MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com, rabidsamfan <rabidsamfan@v...>
wrote:
>
> See, I'd call that a blend right off the bat, as Bard is drawn
strictly from
> the books and Gimli blowing the horn is definitely from the film,
and the
> story is doing its best to bind those two things into a single
whole.
>
> Part of the problem, I guess, is that I don't ask that question
first. And
> it is the first question on Dwim's form.
>
> To quote:
>
> [My story is:
>
> 1. Bookverse: based on the writings of J.R.R. Tolkien and/or drafts
> made available by C. Tolkien
> 2. Filmverse: based on a film adaptation of "The Lord of the
Rings" or
> "The Hobbit"...]
>
> Now when I think "Bookverse" I don't include anything from
Tolkien's letters
> or HoME, or even Unfinished Tales. If I were better acquainted
with the
> Silmarillion, I'd definitely include that in my thinking, but
mostly I think
> of The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings (and in their "most
corrected" form,
> at that) as being the basic canon of the Bookverse.

Ok, let's start again.

The "Bookverse/Movieverse" option, the way I have it, is intended to
talk about which source material you're using for your story.

Now, given that absolutely uninflected, stripped down sentence, I am
not consistent in requiring an author to choose between them if said
author has used both books and movies.

However, the work that that filter *can* do is to show us which fics
should be moved into the movieverse category on the grounds that a
movieverse story has a different set of canonical events governing
it.

A third layer of interpretation is taking each fic according to what
appears as the author's intention: is the author attempting to say
something about the movieverse events, even if by drawing
significantly on bookverse events/personalities (this is what I
would understand Marta's fic to be doing) or is it attempting to say
something about bookverse events/personalities, even if by
incorporating movieverse elements that seem to point in certain
directions? Here, I don't think it makes sense to have a "blend"
option.

Given that, the problem point is going to be deciding what the
function of the filter is. Do we want to use it to mark out stories
that probably should go into a category on their own? Or do we want
it to function just to let readers know what source material they
may need in order to make sense of the story? If the latter, we have
to find another place to put movieverse as a category or decide if
we want that to be a category (I personally would go with a
movieverse category provided it meets the 2x5 viability criterion);
we have to make sure that those filling in the form understand it's
not redundant as a question.

If the former, then *if* we added "blend" we would have to define
what it is that "blend" is trying to do that clearly separates it
from "movieverse" and "bookverse", which I'm not convinced we've
done, at least not on any basis other than "I just happen to use two
different sources". If we fail to do that, then I think there's too
little to give readers a sense of why this is a category, and it may
end up being a sort of catch-all with no clear sense of cohesion.
Granted, with big categories like "Drama" there's also that danger,
but I think people have a better sense of what "dramatic" means and
can see more or less why it makes sense, *given the aim of the
story*, to put it in drama (or Elves, or post-Ring War, etc.).

> Hmm. I can see that what I really need to do is
> explain how I would do it if I were in charge of the universe.
>
> Okay. Might take me a day or so, depending on the insomnia. I'll
go hunt
> up Dwim's most current form of the form and see if I can make a
coherent
> contribution.

I'm at work, so I can't access the form at home on my computer,
which has changed slightly due to Kathy's pointing out some errors
and oversights. I think I'll post the form in the YahooGroup's site
Files when I get a chance, and then update it when needed. That
should make it easier to find for everyone than if they have to hunt
through pages of posts.

Dwim

Msg# 6431

Re: Movie-verse versus Bookverse (Re: Question concerning Dwim's li Posted by rabidsamfan December 03, 2005 - 20:31:29 Topic ID# 6411
Thanks. I've gone and gotten the version that was linked at the LJ journal,
but I know folks have talked about variations on it.

I suspect that part of the reason I don't just shrug my shoulders and wander
away is that I see the issue of source material as essentially minor, but
the placement of the question makes it a major consideration. I could care
less if a category about the Ents attacking Isengard is half film-based and
half book-based, as long as it's a decent size for the purposes of the
competition.

You mentioned "the aim of the story" and that's precisely why I want to give
authors the option to call something a blend. It's intention that matters
here as much as any definition. There's probably a better word than blend
-- a chimera, perhaps? Defined as a story which intentionally draws strong
elements from two or more disparate sources and attempts to reconcile them?

As far as readers finding things, hmmm. perhaps we could include the
answers the authors gave us in the story information page.

Yeah, it'll probably take a poll...


On 12/3/05, dwimmer_laik <dwimmer_laik@yahoo.com> wrote:
>
> --- In MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com, rabidsamfan <rabidsamfan@v...>
> wrote:
> >
> > See, I'd call that a blend right off the bat, as Bard is drawn
> strictly from
> > the books and Gimli blowing the horn is definitely from the film,
> and the
> > story is doing its best to bind those two things into a single
> whole.
> >
> > Part of the problem, I guess, is that I don't ask that question
> first. And
> > it is the first question on Dwim's form.
> >
> > To quote:
> >
> > [My story is:
> >
> > 1. Bookverse: based on the writings of J.R.R. Tolkien and/or drafts
> > made available by C. Tolkien
> > 2. Filmverse: based on a film adaptation of "The Lord of the
> Rings" or
> > "The Hobbit"...]
> >
> > Now when I think "Bookverse" I don't include anything from
> Tolkien's letters
> > or HoME, or even Unfinished Tales. If I were better acquainted
> with the
> > Silmarillion, I'd definitely include that in my thinking, but
> mostly I think
> > of The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings (and in their "most
> corrected" form,
> > at that) as being the basic canon of the Bookverse.
>
> Ok, let's start again.
>
> The "Bookverse/Movieverse" option, the way I have it, is intended to
> talk about which source material you're using for your story.
>
> Now, given that absolutely uninflected, stripped down sentence, I am
> not consistent in requiring an author to choose between them if said
> author has used both books and movies.
>
> However, the work that that filter *can* do is to show us which fics
> should be moved into the movieverse category on the grounds that a
> movieverse story has a different set of canonical events governing
> it.
>
> A third layer of interpretation is taking each fic according to what
> appears as the author's intention: is the author attempting to say
> something about the movieverse events, even if by drawing
> significantly on bookverse events/personalities (this is what I
> would understand Marta's fic to be doing) or is it attempting to say
> something about bookverse events/personalities, even if by
> incorporating movieverse elements that seem to point in certain
> directions? Here, I don't think it makes sense to have a "blend"
> option.
>
> Given that, the problem point is going to be deciding what the
> function of the filter is. Do we want to use it to mark out stories
> that probably should go into a category on their own? Or do we want
> it to function just to let readers know what source material they
> may need in order to make sense of the story? If the latter, we have
> to find another place to put movieverse as a category or decide if
> we want that to be a category (I personally would go with a
> movieverse category provided it meets the 2x5 viability criterion);
> we have to make sure that those filling in the form understand it's
> not redundant as a question.
>
> If the former, then *if* we added "blend" we would have to define
> what it is that "blend" is trying to do that clearly separates it
> from "movieverse" and "bookverse", which I'm not convinced we've
> done, at least not on any basis other than "I just happen to use two
> different sources". If we fail to do that, then I think there's too
> little to give readers a sense of why this is a category, and it may
> end up being a sort of catch-all with no clear sense of cohesion.
> Granted, with big categories like "Drama" there's also that danger,
> but I think people have a better sense of what "dramatic" means and
> can see more or less why it makes sense, *given the aim of the
> story*, to put it in drama (or Elves, or post-Ring War, etc.).
>
> > Hmm. I can see that what I really need to do is
> > explain how I would do it if I were in charge of the universe.
> >
> > Okay. Might take me a day or so, depending on the insomnia. I'll
> go hunt
> > up Dwim's most current form of the form and see if I can make a
> coherent
> > contribution.
>
> I'm at work, so I can't access the form at home on my computer,
> which has changed slightly due to Kathy's pointing out some errors
> and oversights. I think I'll post the form in the YahooGroup's site
> Files when I get a chance, and then update it when needed. That
> should make it easier to find for everyone than if they have to hunt
> through pages of posts.
>
> Dwim
>
>
>
>
>
>
> SPONSORED LINKS
> Writing book<http://groups.yahoo.com/gads?t=ms&k=Writing+book&w1=Writing+book&w2=Writing+child+book&w3=Book+writing+software&w4=Writing+a+book+report&w5=Creative+writing+book&w6=Writing+and+publishing+a+book&c=6&s=158&.sig=CJ9-GUUZOlmjU1HkIfWNbw> Writing
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> a book report<http://groups.yahoo.com/gads?t=ms&k=Writing+a+book+report&w1=Writing+book&w2=Writing+child+book&w3=Book+writing+software&w4=Writing+a+book+report&w5=Creative+writing+book&w6=Writing+and+publishing+a+book&c=6&s=158&.sig=fYdtZdt6-p_5pQv59n0rdg> Creative
> writing book<http://groups.yahoo.com/gads?t=ms&k=Creative+writing+book&w1=Writing+book&w2=Writing+child+book&w3=Book+writing+software&w4=Writing+a+book+report&w5=Creative+writing+book&w6=Writing+and+publishing+a+book&c=6&s=158&.sig=rWI3CFNk5a9-aA5EiFHQkQ> Writing
> and publishing a book<http://groups.yahoo.com/gads?t=ms&k=Writing+and+publishing+a+book&w1=Writing+book&w2=Writing+child+book&w3=Book+writing+software&w4=Writing+a+book+report&w5=Creative+writing+book&w6=Writing+and+publishing+a+book&c=6&s=158&.sig=OAKaBn2Haziz3vuypwp8Vw>
> ------------------------------
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>
>
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> on the web.
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[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Msg# 6432

Movie-verse versus Bookverse (Re: Question concerning Dwim's list) Posted by dwimmer\_laik December 03, 2005 - 20:45:45 Topic ID# 6411
Re: LJ version

Oh good. I still want to put the form up in the files. It'll make it
easier to find whenever revisions are made. And even if (by a
miracle) this were the final controversy over how the form was set
up, it'd probably still be a good idea to ahve a copy of it isolated
from the flow of messages.

> You mentioned "the aim of the story" and that's precisely why I
want to give
> authors the option to call something a blend. It's intention that
matters
> here as much as any definition. There's probably a better word
than blend
> -- a chimera, perhaps? Defined as a story which intentionally
draws strong
> elements from two or more disparate sources and attempts to
reconcile them?
>

But that question I would see as dependent upon determining *which*
was being reconciled to which? It makes a difference if the aim is
to reconcile the movies to the books, but it's a different thing to
make the books reconciled to the movies. There's an implicit
assumption, I think, about the priority of one source with respect
to another that as I see as both resulting in the same thing: they
both are more concerned with doing something with the movies than
they are with the books.

> As far as readers finding things, hmmm. perhaps we could include
the
> answers the authors gave us in the story information page.

So the suggestion is to move the source material question, in
suitably modified form, to the "subcategories" portion of the form
and then to see whether sufficiently many movieverse fics are
available to form a main category?
>
> Yeah, it'll probably take a poll...

Eventually! I feel as if we're still sort of swimming about at the
moment.

Dwim

Msg# 6433

New file uploaded to MEFAwards Posted by MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com December 03, 2005 - 23:48:45 Topic ID# 1
Hello,

This email message is a notification to let you know that
a file has been uploaded to the Files area of the MEFAwards
group.

File : /STORY FORM 2.doc
Uploaded by : dwimmer_laik <dwimmer_laik@yahoo.com>
Description : Story form proposal for 2006.

You can access this file at the URL:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/MEFAwards/files/STORY%20FORM%202.doc

To learn more about file sharing for your group, please visit:
http://help.yahoo.com/help/us/groups/files

Regards,

dwimmer_laik <dwimmer_laik@yahoo.com>

Msg# 6434

Re: Movie-verse versus Bookverse (Re: Question concerning Dwim's li Posted by Marta Layton December 03, 2005 - 23:54:39 Topic ID# 6411
Hey guys,

I've been thinking about this movieverse/bookverse debate, and as usual
in my mind the question comes down to why we are asking the question;
what we hope to accomplish.

Do we want to help the reader identify stories that draw from the books
or movies? Some people like to read stories that are one or the other;
personally, I prefer pieces that are set strongly in the books. I'll
read movie-based stories but will enjoy them a lot better if I'm not
caught by surprise by movie-inspired details. This is my own quirk,
perhaps not one that's widespread, but I think having the information
available in some form allows people to adapt their own reading styles
to the story information we provide. (Those who don't need it will just
ignore the information.)

Another possible use of this information is creating a category or
sub-category. If movieverse deserves its own (sub-)category, then what
is it about movieverse stories that make them so different from the
other designations in the Books/Time division? Since we seem to be
approaching Books/Times as a series of time periods rather than
sources, we can't really say that movieverse stories should have their
own category because they draw on a different source. We have no
problem thinking fics about the Battle of the Fords of Isen and about
the Battle of Helm's Deep belong in the same category, despite the fact
that one probably draws mainly from UT and another from LOTR. So why
should a piece set around the movies' version of the Great War be
separated from one about the books' version? To be consistent, this
shouldn't be because the source is different but because the timeline
is different. There may be some common points, but if movieverse
stories are getting moved to a different category, it has to be because
the events they're based around are different.

If hybrids deserve their own category in Books/TIme, it's because they
belong to a different timeline than either book or movie. The problem
is, it's not the same timeline. The author is mixing and matching movie
and book events.

Let me try to make clear what I'm thinking about here with a diagram,
and hope that the graphics hold.


1.
/ --> Movie version of Ring War --> \

/ \
1st Age --> 2nd Age --> Early Third Age
--> Fourth Age

\ /
2.
\ --> Book version of Ring War --> /

Going back to the story of mine I referenced earlier... the story is
set in Helm's Deep, and it has Gimli with Theoden just before the final
charge. That's clearly movies; in the books he's off with Eomer in the
caves. It references things from earlier in the timeline (_Hobbit_ era)
from before there are the two branches. In that sense it's irrelevant.
If we have a story that has details that are unique to timeline #1, and
another detail that is unique to timeline #2, we have a problem. For
example if Frodo during the Shire scouring remembers riding to
Rivendell with Arwen. That story straddles the two time lines in a way
that isn't consistent with either one. But I think the majority of
stories that we are calling blends are like my Helm's Deep story: set
in the movie verse but using details from the books to fill in the
backstory. The use of these details doesn't knock them completely out
of their timeline, *provided* those details aren't unique to the other
branch.

What about the above Frodo remembering Arwen story? It seems like it's
in some sense AU. I'm almost tempted to label it as an AU. The story
just isn't consistent with either branch of the timeline.

Not sure how much sense I'm making, and I'm definitely losing steam.
These are just my thoughts on this subject; I'm not sure I necessarily
have an answer to provide, but maybe it will help us see the question
clearer.

Marta

Msg# 6435

Re: New file uploaded to MEFAwards Posted by Kathy December 05, 2005 - 1:11:55 Topic ID# 1
Hi Dwim,

Thanks for putting the form in files...makes it easier to find. Of
course, that also makes it easier for me to drive you crazy by
noticing new things every time I look at it…

So this time I noticed that a few of Marta's suggestions haven't yet
been incorporated (I've cut and pasted from her posts):

Marta:
So why don't we make the division between early and late TA be 2850,
just to be on the safe side? That allows for characters who were a
little older than Bilbo (like the Dwarves), and the events just before
their birth, and gives us a nice, round number.

I know this year some stories about Merry and Pippin in Rohan ended up
in the Rohan category, and we had to fix it when checking ballots. To
keep that from happening again, I'd like to make it clear that an
author should only put something in these fields if they want it to be
used for a sub-category. Maybe "Your answers to these questions will
help MEFA categorizers place your story into a subcategory, subject to
subcategory viability rules. If you do not want your story to compete
in a subcategory based on the answer to a particular story (if, for
example, your story is set in Rohan but you do not want this to be its
subcategory), or if answering a question would serve as a spoiler to
your story, please check the box "Decline to answer."

Me again:
Both of these suggestions make sense to me…especially the idea of
making it clear up front that it's the *subcategory* info the author
supplies that determines what specific group of 5-15 stories the
author's story will compete against. While this info is also in
Marta's FAQ (I forget--were we going to provide a link to that in the
form?), I think it's safer to also put it in the form itself as we
can't be sure every author will actually read the FAQ.

Kathy (Inkling)


--- In MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com, MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com wrote:
>
>
> Hello,
>
> This email message is a notification to let you know that
> a file has been uploaded to the Files area of the MEFAwards
> group.
>
> File : /STORY FORM 2.doc
> Uploaded by : dwimmer_laik <dwimmer_laik@y...>
> Description : Story form proposal for 2006.
>
> You can access this file at the URL:
> http://groups.yahoo.com/group/MEFAwards/files/STORY%20FORM%202.doc
>
> To learn more about file sharing for your group, please visit:
> http://help.yahoo.com/help/us/groups/files
>
> Regards,
>
> dwimmer_laik <dwimmer_laik@y...>
>

Msg# 6436

New file uploaded to MEFAwards Posted by MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com December 05, 2005 - 21:43:36 Topic ID# 1
Hello,

This email message is a notification to let you know that
a file has been uploaded to the Files area of the MEFAwards
group.

File : /STORY FORM 2.doc
Uploaded by : dwimmer_laik <dwimmer_laik@yahoo.com>
Description : Story form proposal 2006--revised, thanks Kathy

You can access this file at the URL:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/MEFAwards/files/STORY%20FORM%202.doc

To learn more about file sharing for your group, please visit:
http://help.yahoo.com/help/us/groups/files

Regards,

dwimmer_laik <dwimmer_laik@yahoo.com>

Msg# 6437

Re: Movie-verse versus Bookverse (Re: Question concerning Dwim's li Posted by Marta Layton December 06, 2005 - 23:18:02 Topic ID# 6411
Hi RSF,

> See, I'd call that a blend right off the bat, as Bard is drawn
> strictly from
> the books and Gimli blowing the horn is definitely from the film, and
> the
> story is doing its best to bind those two things into a single
> whole.   You,
> I gather, feel that any hint of the films moves the story into the
> movieverse, and even want authors to mention if there are moviebits in
> summaries, almost like a warning for unpleasant topics or character
> deaths.
>

So that's at least part of the problem: we're using the terms
differently. If I don't see a story labelled as movieverse and I see
an event that is in the movies but not in the books, I think of it as
an authors' mistakes. I don't mean movie-inspired pieces per se, I just
want to expect it. So for me as reader, I appreciate having this
material labelled. And this is for the authors' good as much as
anything else. My reading of an unlabelled movieverse story will
probably be less forgiving than my reading of one for which I had fair
expectations. It might be the difference between an 8 point and a 10
point review.

For the purpose of categorisation, I'm less sure. I think the first
question we need to answer is whether movieverse stories should be
their own category, and if so why. If we answer that I think it will be
a lot easier to see what to do with blends.

>
> Part of the problem, I guess, is that I don't ask that question
> first.  An
> it is the first question on Dwim's form.
>
> To quote:
>
> [My story is:
>
> 1. Bookverse: based on the writings of J.R.R. Tolkien and/or drafts
> made available by C. Tolkien
> 2. Filmverse: based on a film adaptation of "The Lord of the Rings" or
> "The Hobbit"...]
>
> Now when I think "Bookverse" I don't include anything from Tolkien's
> letters
> or HoME, or even Unfinished Tales.  If I were better acquainted with
> the
> Silmarillion, I'd definitely include that in my thinking, but mostly
> I think
> of The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings (and in their "most
> corrected" form,
> at that) as being the basic canon of the Bookverse.
>
> HoME, the Letters, etc., are in my noggin as "drafts and background
> material".
>

Ah, the joys of being in such a complex canon! I'm for including the
drafts of Tolkien's posthumously published works just to avoid
controversy, because while the details might be different, the *medium*
is at least the same, and Tolkien himself had some hand in choosing the
details. Even if they weren't finished.

And Rabidsamfan, at the risk of dividing the fandom into factions...
you write mostly hobbit fic, right? While there is certainly
information about hobbits in the Letters and HOME, but I think that
most of the *events* at least are set out in LOTR and TH. I honestly
can't imagine writing Gondor without knowing a lot more about the
history of Numenor than we see in the appendices. This is even more
true for the elves; I personally think the most interesting part about
them are the allusions to the "deeper matters" that are only told in
full in the Silm, or UT. In my mind, if it doesn't contradict the
published books it's fair game.

That's just my personal opinion, though. The main reason I'm allowing
C. Tolkien's stuff is it side-steps a controversy on what just is
canon. People have been arguing over that for decades, and I doubt
we'll settle them in a manner that everyone will agree with.

> So what if we skip that question for now, and save it for later.  Now
> we
> have two primary questions on the form (and again, they're not in the
> form
> I'd divide things.)...   Hmm.  I can see that what I really need to
> do is
> explain how I would do it if I were in charge of the universe.
>
> Okay.  Might take me a day or so, depending on the insomnia.  I'll go
> hunt
> up Dwim's most current form of the form and see if I can make a
> coherent
> contribution.  Not that I expect it to be used, mind you, but so you
> can see
> how I'm thinking.
>

By all means! I've thrown out my opinion, and I look forward to seeing
how you'd handle these questions. And whenever you have the time to ldo
that, of course.

Marta

Msg# 6438

Re: New file uploaded to MEFAwards Posted by Marta Layton December 06, 2005 - 23:20:38 Topic ID# 1
Hi Kathy,

> Thanks for putting the form in files...makes it easier to find. Of 
> course, that also makes it easier for me to drive you crazy by
> noticing new things every time I look at it&
>

I like it in the files, but Dwim, could you also post the form as a
post to the group? The posts are accessible to everyone, even people
who aren't members of the group. Specifically people in the LJ. It
would be nice to be able to point to a link that they could see, too.

<snip>
> Me again:
> Both of these suggestions make sense to me&especially the idea of
> making it clear up front that it's the *subcategory* info the author
> supplies that determines what specific group of 5-15 stories the
> author's story will compete against.  While this info is also in
> Marta's FAQ (I forget--were we going to provide a link to that in the
> form?), I think it's safer to also put it in the form itself as we
> can't be sure every author will actually read the FAQ.
>

Anthony and I talked about putting it on the site. I need to get them
polished off and then work with him to make that happen. (It's my
laziness in not getting my end done, btw. I'll try to make it happen.)
At the very least they'll be moved to Ainae's site with rules and
regulations (http://home.earthlink.net/~ainae/mefa/ ), and we can put a
link on the form to the FAQ.

Marta

Msg# 6439

Re: New file uploaded to MEFAwards Posted by Kathy December 07, 2005 - 1:51:37 Topic ID# 1
--- In MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com, Marta Layton <melayton@g...> wrote:
>
> I like it in the files, but Dwim, could you also post the form as a
> post to the group? The posts are accessible to everyone, even
> people who aren't members of the group. Specifically people in the
> LJ. It would be nice to be able to point to a link that they could
> see, too.
>

Before it gets posted anywhere else, I think there's still a date
error:

3. Early Third Age: Stories set in the Third Age before 2900. These
stories should draw from the histories of the cultures of Middle-
earth, and in most cases will not involve characters who feature
into "The Lord of the Rings".

4. Late Third Age: Stories set between TA 2850 and TA 3017. Stories in
this category may include stories based around The Hobbit or about the
childhood of the characters of LOTR.

Since the date in #4 was changed to TA 2850, shouldn't it also be
changed in #3?

Kathy (Inkling)

Msg# 6440

Movie-verse versus Bookverse (Re: Question concerning Dwim's list) Posted by rhapsody\_the\_bard December 07, 2005 - 2:56:28 Topic ID# 6411
--- In MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com, Marta Layton <melayton@g...> wrote:

Okay, I've been trying to follow this conversation the past days, but
I am not sure if I understand completely why this is brought up for
discussion.. It might have been the flu though ;)

> So that's at least part of the problem: we're using the terms
> differently. If I don't see a story labelled as movieverse and I
> see an event that is in the movies but not in the books, I think of
> it as an authors' mistakes. I don't mean movie-inspired pieces per
> se, I just want to expect it. So for me as reader, I appreciate
> having this material labelled. And this is for the authors' good as
> much as anything else. My reading of an unlabelled movieverse story
> will probably be less forgiving than my reading of one for which I
> had fair expectations. It might be the difference between an 8 point
> and a 10 point review.

Well, reading this I wonder... what if an author does thorough book
research, but you (as a reader) think it is a movie thing (maybe
because it feels a bit alike, or PJ dived more into the books than you
assumed). What then? I think you need to be aware of this as well. We
all can't know every single detail of what Tolkien wrote or stated, we
all miss things when we read (or form our own idea about it)...

> For the purpose of categorisation, I'm less sure. I think the first
> question we need to answer is whether movieverse stories should be
> their own category, and if so why. If we answer that I think it will
> be a lot easier to see what to do with blends.

Well, this is something I have a hard time understanding currently...
I mean didn't we had a movieverse category? And didn't it work quite well?

>> Now when I think "Bookverse" I don't include anything from
>> Tolkien's letters or HoME, or even Unfinished Tales. If I were
>> better acquainted with the Silmarillion, I'd definitely include
>> that in my thinking, but mostly I think of The Hobbit and The Lord
>> of the Rings (and in their "most corrected" form,at that) as being
>> the basic canon of the Bookverse.
>>
>> HoME, the Letters, etc., are in my noggin as "drafts and
>> background material".
>
> Ah, the joys of being in such a complex canon! I'm for including the
> drafts of Tolkien's posthumously published works just to avoid
> controversy, because while the details might be different, the
> *medium* is at least the same, and Tolkien himself had some hand in
> choosing the details. Even if they weren't finished.

Well the thing is here, especially with HOME is that Tolkien drafted
so many versions of one event, that it is quite often contradicting.
It is a great source for plotbunnies though, but I can imagine that
when someone explores a HOME thing that covers an event in the
Silmarillion that is contradicting... that would be very interesting
to see how you guys want to see that as categorisation because
technically: it isn't AU, you can quote canon on that.

> And Rabidsamfan, at the risk of dividing the fandom into factions...
> you write mostly hobbit fic, right? While there is certainly
> information about hobbits in the Letters and HOME, but I think that
> most of the *events* at least are set out in LOTR and TH. I honestly
> can't imagine writing Gondor without knowing a lot more about the
> history of Numenor than we see in the appendices. This is even more
> true for the elves; I personally think the most interesting part
> about them are the allusions to the "deeper matters" that are only
> told in full in the Silm, or UT. In my mind, if it doesn't
> contradict the published books it's fair game.

Even the URT contains contradicting material... just don't try to dive
too much into exploring Celeborn for example... it gave drive you
insane ;) And I am not starting about LACE, which is never ever
mentioned in the Silmarillion to begin with.

*dives for cover*

Rhapsody

Msg# 6441

Re: Movie-verse versus Bookverse (Re: Question concerning Dwim's li Posted by aelfwina@cableone.net December 07, 2005 - 5:35:25 Topic ID# 6411
----- Original Message -----
From: "Marta Layton" <melayton@gmail.com>
To: <MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Tuesday, December 06, 2005 11:20 PM
Subject: Re: [MEFAwards] Movie-verse versus Bookverse (Re: Question
concerning Dwim's list)


So that's at least part of the problem: we're using the terms
differently. If I don't see a story labelled as movieverse and I see
an event that is in the movies but not in the books, I think of it as
an authors' mistakes. I don't mean movie-inspired pieces per se, I just
want to expect it. So for me as reader, I appreciate having this
material labelled. And this is for the authors' good as much as
anything else. My reading of an unlabelled movieverse story will
probably be less forgiving than my reading of one for which I had fair
expectations. It might be the difference between an 8 point and a 10
point review.

::Now, I have to say, I write what I think of as essentially book-verse
stories. Yet I often draw on visual elements and bits of characterizations
that were inspired by the films, as long as they don't contradict the book.
For example, JRRT never tells us the color of Frodo's or Pippin's eyes--so I
don't feel there's anything amiss in using the color of the actors who
played them. And we are certainly never given a description of the hobbits'
articles of dress, so mentioning Merry's yellow weskit or Pippin's scarf
would certainly not fall into putting the story in movie-verse, to me.
On the other hand, sometimes people read into a story something that's not
there. In my very first story, I had a less than flattering protrayal of
Denethor, my own interpretation of his character for over 30 years, from the
time I read the book the first time. Yet I had a reviewer who assumed I was
writing "movie-verser Denethor".
So I would say that a definition of "movie-verse" or "book-verse" is very
subjective, and rightfully left to the author to decide.

For the purpose of categorisation, I'm less sure. I think the first
question we need to answer is whether movieverse stories should be
their own category, and if so why. If we answer that I think it will be
a lot easier to see what to do with blends.

::We had a movie-verse category, or was it sub-category? last year, and I
think it seemed to work all right. I am afraid I would put this whole
question to the old "if it ain't broke..." question.

> Now when I think "Bookverse" I don't include anything from Tolkien's
> letters
> or HoME, or even Unfinished Tales. If I were better acquainted with
> the
> Silmarillion, I'd definitely include that in my thinking, but mostly
> I think
> of The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings (and in their "most
> corrected" form,
> at that) as being the basic canon of the Bookverse.
>
> HoME, the Letters, etc., are in my noggin as "drafts and background
> material".
>

Ah, the joys of being in such a complex canon! I'm for including the
drafts of Tolkien's posthumously published works just to avoid
controversy, because while the details might be different, the *medium*
is at least the same, and Tolkien himself had some hand in choosing the
details. Even if they weren't finished.

::I fall somewhere in between. I think of The Silm as more or less canon to
the events which take place during those years. I think of UT and Letters
as "semi-canon"--useful for factoids that are not included in the finished
works, and then I think of the rest as "quasi-canon", again useful for
certain factoids, but not quite so much so, as the aforementioned works.
All of them are to be treated with a certain amount of respect as revealing
some of JRRT's own mind on certain matters, but I don't see them as "canon",
except for The Silm.


And Rabidsamfan, at the risk of dividing the fandom into factions...
you write mostly hobbit fic, right? While there is certainly
information about hobbits in the Letters and HOME, but I think that
most of the *events* at least are set out in LOTR and TH. I honestly
can't imagine writing Gondor without knowing a lot more about the
history of Numenor than we see in the appendices. This is even more
true for the elves; I personally think the most interesting part about
them are the allusions to the "deeper matters" that are only told in
full in the Silm, or UT. In my mind, if it doesn't contradict the
published books it's fair game.

That's just my personal opinion, though. The main reason I'm allowing
C. Tolkien's stuff is it side-steps a controversy on what just is
canon. People have been arguing over that for decades, and I doubt
we'll settle them in a manner that everyone will agree with.

::You are quite right in noting that we hobbit writers have a lot more
published material to draw on. There's nothing wrong or divisive in
pointing that out.
Your statement in saying "if it doesn't contradict the published books it's
fair game" is interesting, however, in the light of what you had to say
about seeing movie-verse elements in a book-verse story. 8-)

::At any rate, I do think that the question of movie-verse versus book-verse
as a category is being made more important than it really needs to be. It
should be a question on the form, but like RSF, I don't think it needs to be
the first one, or even a main one. It's just a small part of what needs to
be decided. And the author can make that call.

::My two cents.
Dreamflower

> So what if we skip that question for now, and save it for later. Now
> we
> have two primary questions on the form (and again, they're not in the
> form
> I'd divide things.)... Hmm. I can see that what I really need to
> do is
> explain how I would do it if I were in charge of the universe.
>
> Okay. Might take me a day or so, depending on the insomnia. I'll go
> hunt
> up Dwim's most current form of the form and see if I can make a
> coherent
> contribution. Not that I expect it to be used, mind you, but so you
> can see
> how I'm thinking.
>

By all means! I've thrown out my opinion, and I look forward to seeing
how you'd handle these questions. And whenever you have the time to ldo
that, of course.

Marta





Yahoo! Groups Links

Msg# 6442

Re: New file uploaded to MEFAwards Posted by dwimmer\_laik December 07, 2005 - 8:08:49 Topic ID# 1
Just keep noting the errors. I'm sorry, I'm not paying a whole lot of
attention at the moment to coherence, just throwing things in
piecemeal. Hopefully in a week, I'll be able to concentrate properly.

Also, look again at the timeline dates. I noticed we seemed to have
exclusive endpoints in every single case. I tried fussing with that a
bit so that we don't get questions like: "But my story is *about* the
overthrow of Morgoth, where should *that* go if First Age is
pre-overthrow and Second Age is defined as post-overthrow?"

Dwim

*********


STORY FORM: Please read *all* instructions, and complete all fields to
the extent required.

BASICS

Title: [already provided]
Author: [already provided]
Summary: [author provides]
Rating (if incorrect, please change): [MEFA drop-down]
Warnings (please enter warnings you feel are appropriate)
Romantic pairings (please see <link>'that which must be
identified"</link> for explanation and options):
URL (if not preferred site, please replace): [provided by nominator]

Please choose *one* and *only one* from each of the following three lists:

My story is *predominantly*:

1. Bookverse: based on the writings of J.R.R. Tolkien and/or drafts
made available by C. Tolkien
2. Filmverse: based on a film adaptation of "The Lord of the Rings" or
"The Hobbit"

My story is:

1. Fiction
2. Non-fiction (if non-fiction, please skip to number 8 in
"Subcategories")


My story is best described as a...

1. Drabble (100 words exactly, plus 15 for title)
2. Drabble cycle (a series of individual drabbles connected by some theme)
3. Ficlet (101 up to, but not including, 500 words)
4. Short Story (500-10,000 words)
5. Novella (10,001-50,000 words)
6. Novel (>50,000 words)
7. Poem (any length)


MAIN CATEGORIES

Please choose *one* and *only one* from each of the following lists.
Your responses will help us to try to place your story in a MEFA
category that is most appropriate.

A. Which of these time periods is your story based in?

1. Before the end of the First Age - anything before or during the
overthrow of Morgoth.

2. The Second Age - anything between the overthrow of Morgoth and the
Last Alliance, including stories about the latter event.

3. Early Third Age: Stories set in the Third Age *before* 2850. These
stories should draw from the histories of the cultures of
Middle-earth, and in most cases will not involve characters who
feature into "The Lord of the Rings".

4. Late Third Age: Stories set *in or between* the years TA 2850 and
TA 3017. Stories in this category may include stories based around The
Hobbit or about the childhoods of the characters of LOTR.

5. The Great Years: Stories set *in or between* TA 3018 and TA 3022.
These stories should be set around events like the Quest to destroy
the Ring, pre-war politics in Rohan and Gondor, the occupation of the
Shire, the War of the Ring itself, and the aftermath of the Ring War
before or about the sailing of the Ring-bearers from the Grey Havens.

6. Fourth Age and Beyond - Stories about the events following the
sailing of the Ring-bearers, or crossovers between Middle-earth and
the modern world.


B. Which of these genres best describes your story?

1. Action/Adventure
2. Alternate Universe
3. Crossover
4. Drama (includes Angst)
5. Horror
6. Humor
7. Mystery
8. Romance

C. Which of the following types of characters would you say is the
primary focus of your story?

1. Dwarves
2. Elves
3. Ents
4. Hobbits
5. Men
6. Valar/Ainur
7. Villains
8. Other
9. Story specifically interested in depicting and examining
interspecies interactions


D. Rank your category choices. In which of the above categories would
you *most prefer* your story to compete? Please list your first
category choice first, and your last category choice third (e.g., A,
C, B).



SUBCATEGORIES

Please fill in the following information./[Please select the following
from the drop-down lists provided or, if necessary, input the required
information in the "Other" textbox.] Your answers to these questions
will help MEFA categorizers place your story into a <link FAQ
explanation of...>subcategory</link>, subject to subcategory viability
rules. If you do NOT want your story to compete in a subcategory based
on the answer to a particular question (if, for example, your story is
set in Rohan but you do not want this to be its subcategory), OR if
answering a question would serve as a spoiler to your story (e.g.,
entering your story into subcategory "Bilbo" derived from question 2
would give away who the narrator was, when keeping that information
hidden for a time was important to your plot), please check the box
"Decline to answer."

1. Where does your story primarily take place, or about which place
does your story revolve (e.g., Gondolin, Houses of Healing, Beleriand,
Rohan, The Angle, The Shire, Angband etc.)? Please limit yourself to
four or fewer main places.

Check box: Decline to answer

2. Who are your *main* characters, in order of priority? (Acknowledged
groups such as "Fellowship", "Ringbearers", "Feanorians", etc., also
useful here.) Please limit yourself to *four or fewer* main
characters/groups of characters.

Check box: Decline to answer

3. Which time periods *NOT* listed above does the story primarily take
place in/focus on (e.g., Pre-quest, Time of Trees, War of the Ring,
etc.)? Please limit yourself to four or fewer times.

Check box: Decline to answer

4. If your story is based on filmed versions of Tolkien's work, which
film/set of films is it based on?

Check box: Decline to answer

5. Is there a major canonical event around which your story revolves
(e.g., Akallabeth, destruction of Sirion, making of Khazad-dûm, Battle
of Unnumbered Tears, etc.)? Please limit yourself to four or fewer events.

Check box: Decline to answer

6. Is there a particular subgenre or form commonly used in fandom or
film/literature that you think is applicable to and a good description
of your story that isn't represented above (e.g., metafic, noir,
pastische, filk, etc.)?

Check box: Decline to answer

7. If your story is a poem, what is its form (e.g., haiku, tanka,
terzanelle, sonnet, free verse etc.)?

Check box: Decline to answer

8. If your story is non-fiction, what is its main topic?

Check box: Decline to answer

9. If your story is non-fiction, is it an essay (offering
interpretation) or an article (research article meant to assist others
by gathering and presenting useful facts, but without offering an
interpretation)?

Check box: Decline to answer

Msg# 6443

Re: New file uploaded to MEFAwards Posted by rhapsody\_the\_bard December 07, 2005 - 8:37:57 Topic ID# 1
--- In MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com, "dwimmer_laik" <dwimmer_laik@y...>
wrote:
>
> Just keep noting the errors. I'm sorry, I'm not paying a whole lot of
> attention at the moment to coherence, just throwing things in
> piecemeal. Hopefully in a week, I'll be able to concentrate properly.
>
> Also, look again at the timeline dates. I noticed we seemed to have
> exclusive endpoints in every single case. I tried fussing with that a
> bit so that we don't get questions like: "But my story is *about* the
> overthrow of Morgoth, where should *that* go if First Age is
> pre-overthrow and Second Age is defined as post-overthrow?"

Well given the fact that first Morgoth was overthrown.. before the
breaking of Beleriand (which marks the end of the First Age), so a
story featuring that will always fit in the First Age. A story about
the consequences of the breaking of Beleriand (elven races settling in
Middle Earth, the Edain settling on Numenor), that would be a complete
different ballgame.

Rhapsody

Msg# 6444

Movie-verse versus Bookverse (Re: Question concerning Dwim's list) Posted by dwimmer\_laik December 07, 2005 - 8:59:19 Topic ID# 6411
--- In MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com, "rhapsody_the_bard"
<rhapsody74@g...> wrote:
>
> --- In MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com, Marta Layton <melayton@g...> wrote:
>
> Okay, I've been trying to follow this conversation the past days, but
> I am not sure if I understand completely why this is brought up for
> discussion.. It might have been the flu though ;)
>
> > So that's at least part of the problem: we're using the terms
> > differently. If I don't see a story labelled as movieverse and I
> > see an event that is in the movies but not in the books, I think of
> > it as an authors' mistakes. I don't mean movie-inspired pieces per
> > se, I just want to expect it. So for me as reader, I appreciate
> > having this material labelled. And this is for the authors' good as
> > much as anything else. My reading of an unlabelled movieverse story
> > will probably be less forgiving than my reading of one for which I
> > had fair expectations. It might be the difference between an 8 point
> > and a 10 point review.
>
> Well, reading this I wonder... what if an author does thorough book
> research, but you (as a reader) think it is a movie thing (maybe
> because it feels a bit alike, or PJ dived more into the books than you
> assumed). What then?

Can you cite an example where this is the case? I'm not sure what
you're talking about here, other than a purely hypothetical scenario.
The plot points of the movie that depart from the books are pretty
obvious and well-trodden fandom ground by now. If someone uses the
plot device that Elrond had a conversation in the garden in front of
Gilraen's graave about Arwen, that's movieverse. Can you reconcile it
with bookverse? With sufficient skill, you could say it's not
counter-canonical, it's just extra-canonical. But do we know where
that came from? Yes: the movies.

If one disagrees with the characterization PJ used, that's a more
subtle point, usually, and much more open to the "PJ did more research
than you think" objection. Also, just to be clear, I don't assume PJ
did less than the required amount of research. I assume what happened
was that in order to make a feature film that had twenty speaking
roles that were significant, he took poetic license in ways that
sometimes worked out far less than well because they played to
preconceptions of the average viewer's patience and ability to follow
a plot. Having done the research does not guarantee a good
interpretation, it just makes it less likely to be bad.

So let's say someone characterizes Denethor as a right bastard who's
unfit to rule in every important way, and I think to myself, "Gee, PJ
did that too. This is a movieverse story, not a bookverse one." If I
think that's not a great thing, but I think it's someone adhereing to
the movieverse, I'm going to give that person points for working with
flawed source material as best they can, but whether bookverse or
movieverse, my review will be relatively short, because I just don't
think that in *any* universe, that's a good characterization and so I
won't enjoy the story as much. I'll enjoy it *more* if I think it's
movieverse, whether or not it's warned of--that's called being
charitable. If I think the person got this from the books, she'll
actually get fewer points because I'll think there's less excuse for it.

I think you need to be aware of this as well. We
> all can't know every single detail of what Tolkien wrote or stated, we
> all miss things when we read (or form our own idea about it)...

You say "form our own idea about it" like this is both a bad thing and
an avoidable thing. Nothing literary is read about which one forms
onnly the idea that the author had of it. Yes, there are bad
interpretations, but a good interpretation is still an interpretation
and constitutes "my own idea about it." In the case you mention, it's
going to be in the author's benefit where I'm concerned to give me
reasons to think s/he is basing his/her work on the movieverse. If
not, I'm going to think it's a bad bookverse interpretation, just as I
think PJ's screen adaptation of Denethor is a bad interpretation,
though not necessarily an unresearched one.

<snip>


> > Ah, the joys of being in such a complex canon! I'm for including the
> > drafts of Tolkien's posthumously published works just to avoid
> > controversy, because while the details might be different, the
> > *medium* is at least the same, and Tolkien himself had some hand in
> > choosing the details. Even if they weren't finished.
>
> Well the thing is here, especially with HOME is that Tolkien drafted
> so many versions of one event, that it is quite often contradicting.
> It is a great source for plotbunnies though, but I can imagine that
> when someone explores a HOME thing that covers an event in the
> Silmarillion that is contradicting... that would be very interesting
> to see how you guys want to see that as categorisation because
> technically: it isn't AU, you can quote canon on that.

You seem to be treating this one filter as if everything depended on
it. I recommend checking the example form I filled out for a Trotter
and Bingo story. You can say "My story is bookverse" and still choose
*AU* as a category if it's based on material that ws clearly discarded
by Tolkien, or depending on how you view underused sections of the
drafts (LACE) in their relation to other drafts (The Silm is *also*
not work JRRT approved or finished--it is heavily edited by C.Tolkien
and Gavriel, iirc--so Silm as canon is itself a fan creation,
inaugurated by the need to have some point of reference that was
relatively stable for the pre-Third Age stories, that acknowledged
that Tolkien had done some work there so it wasn't a free for all).
you can do that, and say in your author's notes or summary, "I'm
relying on material from HoME that Tolkien discarded." The forms can
accommodate this level of sophistication--I think the concern, that
including the drafts as bookverse is misleading, is not taking into
account the full range of data and the manipulability of that data
that the form demands and can support.

<snip>
>
> Even the URT contains contradicting material... just don't try to dive
> too much into exploring Celeborn for example... it gave drive you
> insane ;) And I am not starting about LACE, which is never ever
> mentioned in the Silmarillion to begin with.

See above, especially the point about the Silm, which to me says a lot
to me about your conception of canon--it's still not complex enough
despite the objections you're trying to bring to bear on behalf of
that very point. We are *all* going to make assumptions, we cn't help
it. It's how those assumptions are used in crafting the story so tht
it is convincing based on the most reasonable conception of canon
(itself a position one can argue for and should) you can find for your
story.

Maybe it's because I hang out at HASA normally, but this is the
standard we use. If it's citable, it's fair game--you don't get to
dock the person just because s/he used some obscure, discarded portion
of Tolkien's drafts. But just because it's *citable* doesn't make it a
good story yet--our conception of canon *is* complex because the
interrelations of JRRT's writings is complex and ultimately in some
cases 'undecidable'; it is therefore not enough to just point to the
source material. If you use something clearly discarded (Trotter, for
example), be prepared to make your case for why this story needs to be
written--do it not by the footnotes (which still need to be there so
the reader can find out what's given in the draft(s) you're working
with), but by telling me a good story. That's the bottom line. If you
choose to take on the challenge of working with material that is
contradictory because you *need* something from it, be prepared to be
very sophisticated as a writer in leading your reader through the mess.

But the complexities of canon aside, I really think there's a focus
that's too narrow, here. Take the story you deem to be a good example
of what your'e talking about. Put it through the form--the whole
thing, not just the bookverse/movieverse filter, and ask yourself
whether or not the whole form seems likely to be misleading. Post the
results and explain why, so we can see what you're talking about.
Right now, possibly because I, too, have caught the dreaded disease of
the month, I'm not able to see what you're talking about in your
objections very clearly--not in a concrete way that convinces me this
is more than a set of exceptional cases (w.r.t. the 'what if it really
is bookverse and you only think it's movieverse' position at least). I
need concrete stuff! My head is too filled with goop for anything less
to enter it, unfortunately. :-S

Dwim

Msg# 6445

Movie-verse versus Bookverse (Re: Question concerning Dwim's list) Posted by rhapsody\_the\_bard December 07, 2005 - 10:41:52 Topic ID# 6411
--- In MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com, "dwimmer_laik" <dwimmer_laik@y...>
wrote:
>
> --- In MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com, "rhapsody_the_bard"
> <rhapsody74@g...> wrote:
>>
>> --- In MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com, Marta Layton <melayton@g...> >>wrote:
> >
>> Okay, I've been trying to follow this conversation the past days,
>> but I am not sure if I understand completely why this is brought up
>> for discussion.. It might have been the flu though ;)
>>
>>> So that's at least part of the problem: we're using the terms
>>> differently. If I don't see a story labelled as movieverse and I
>>> see an event that is in the movies but not in the books, I think
>>> of it as an authors' mistakes. I don't mean movie-inspired pieces
>>> per se, I just want to expect it. So for me as reader, I
>>> appreciate having this material labelled. And this is for the
>>> authors' good as much as anything else. My reading of an
>>> unlabelled movieverse story will probably be less forgiving than
>>> my reading of one for which I had fair expectations. It might be
>>> the difference between an 8 point and a 10 point review.
>>
>> Well, reading this I wonder... what if an author does thorough book
>> research, but you (as a reader) think it is a movie thing (maybe
>> because it feels a bit alike, or PJ dived more into the books than
>> you assumed). What then?
>
> Can you cite an example where this is the case? I'm not sure what
> you're talking about here, other than a purely hypothetical
> scenario.

How about the scene where Isildur, Elendil and Gil-Galad take on
Sauron... well in the movie you don't see Gil-Galad fighting that
much, so what if the story appears to be a re-telling of the tale on
how Elendil fought Sauron (besides the whole discussion what truly
happened there and what/who brought Sauron down on his knees). A
reader can form an image in his/her head that it is movieverse, while
the author in question might have thoroughly researched it.


> Having done the research does not guarantee a good
> interpretation, it just makes it less likely to be bad.

Well that is a nice pat on the back for those authors who do spend
loads of amounts on doing very thorough research but are questioned
for canonical interpretation.

<snip>
>
>> I think you need to be aware of this as well. We all can't know
<< every single detail of what Tolkien wrote or stated, we all miss
>> things when we read (or form our own idea about it)...
>
> You say "form our own idea about it" like this is both a bad thing
> and an avoidable thing.

Well that is your interpretation of my words. I surely didn't mention
it that way. But when I read how Marta for example might give a person
less points because of it.. I am very much for own interpretation
because it is, for me, a good way to see a different perspective where
I never thought of before. For example, I might write a very arrogant
Boromir (with some good citations to back it up), but she adores him
and she doesn't agree with my intepretation of Boromir at all.. am I
rewarded with 2 points less then?

> Nothing literary is read about which one forms onnly the idea that
> the author had of it. Yes, there are bad interpretations, but a good
> interpretation is still an interpretation and constitutes "my own
> idea about it." In the case you mention, it's going to be in the
> author's benefit where I'm concerned to give me reasons to think
> s/he is basing his/her work on the movieverse. If not, I'm going to
> think it's a bad bookverse interpretation, just as I think PJ's
> screen adaptation of Denethor is a bad interpretation, though not
> necessarily an unresearched one.

It all remains pretty subjective what is a good or bad interpretation.
I rather not think that way.
>
> <snip>

> > It is a great source for plotbunnies though, but I can imagine
> > that when someone explores a HOME thing that covers an event in
> < the Silmarillion that is contradicting... that would be very
> >interesting to see how you guys want to see that as categorisation
> > because technically: it isn't AU, you can quote canon on that.
>
> You seem to be treating this one filter as if everything depended on
> it. I recommend checking the example form I filled out for a Trotter
> and Bingo story. You can say "My story is bookverse" and still
> choose *AU* as a category if it's based on material that ws clearly
> discarded by Tolkien, or depending on how you view underused
> sections of the drafts (LACE) in their relation to other drafts (The
> Silm is *also* not work JRRT approved or finished--it is heavily
> edited by C.Tolkien and Gavriel, iirc--so Silm as canon is itself a
> fan creation, inaugurated by the need to have some point of
> reference that was relatively stable for the pre-Third Age stories,
> that acknowledged that Tolkien had done some work there so it wasn't
> a free for all).

Oh I can see that. Sure. But what is pure canon then? I often wonder
that. I can write for example a different version of the Lay of
Leithian and still keep it *not* AU. And there are many versions of
this Lay in HOME. My point being is: are you gonna 'categorise' all
stories that have a main plot element derived from HOME in the AU...
with this reasoning?

> you can do that, and say in your author's notes or summary, "I'm
> relying on material from HoME that Tolkien discarded." The forms can
> accommodate this level of sophistication--I think the concern, that
> including the drafts as bookverse is misleading, is not taking into
> account the full range of data and the manipulability of that data
> that the form demands and can support.

I am not following this. How can a story based on HOME be seen as
misleading? I most certainly misread this, can you explain it a bit
more clearly?

> <snip>
>>
>> Even the UT contains contradicting material... just don't try to
>> dive too much into exploring Celeborn for example... it gave drive
>> you insane ;) And I am not starting about LACE, which is never ever
>> mentioned in the Silmarillion to begin with.
>
> See above, especially the point about the Silm, which to me says a
> lot to me about your conception of canon--it's still not complex
> enough despite the objections you're trying to bring to bear on
> behalf of that very point.

Does it truly Dwim? I really wonder about that.

> We are *all* going to make assumptions, we cn't help it. It's how
> those assumptions are used in crafting the story so tht it is
> convincing based on the most reasonable conception of canon
> (itself a position one can argue for and should) you can find for
> your story.

The moment you read a book, you form your own idea about it. At that
moment, the manner how you process it, it will be an assumption and
your opinion is actually subjective. You can find people who share
those assumptions or not, that doesn't make it purely objective
straight away.

> Maybe it's because I hang out at HASA normally, but this is the
> standard we use. If it's citable, it's fair game--you don't get to
> dock the person just because s/he used some obscure, discarded
> portion of Tolkien's drafts. But just because it's *citable* doesn't
> make it a good story yet--our conception of canon *is* complex
> because the interrelations of JRRT's writings is complex and
> ultimately in some cases 'undecidable'; it is therefore not enough
> to just point to the source material. If you use something clearly
> discarded (Trotter, for example), be prepared to make your case for
> why this story needs to be written--do it not by the footnotes
> (which still need to be there so the reader can find out what's
> given in the draft(s) you're working with), but by telling me a good
> story. That's the bottom line.

Well maybe that is a reason why I am no longer active there. I don't
feel the need to justify my drive to pursue a bunny coming from HOME
or UT for that matter. Neither do I think that anyone should do that.
But that is my personal opinion, for me, taking an element and run
with it doesn't make a story less to me.

> Right now, possibly because I, too, have caught the dreaded disease
> of the month, I'm not able to see what you're talking about in your
> objections very clearly--not in a concrete way that convinces me
> this is more than a set of exceptional cases (w.r.t. the 'what if it
> really is bookverse and you only think it's movieverse' position at
> least). I need concrete stuff! My head is too filled with goop for
> anything less to enter it, unfortunately. :-S

Well I am just recovering from it (the dreaded disease) and I am
asking basically *why* this is discussed because I still can't follow
the reasoning why. To me the main category movieverse worked
brilliantly and I am wondering why movieverse is up for discussion.
See above: I do clearly ask for clarification because I really can't
follow the discussion. It feels like many things are getting mingled
and it's highly confusing (especially when your mind is foggy).

Rhapsody

Msg# 6446

Re: New file uploaded to MEFAwards Posted by Kathy December 07, 2005 - 14:58:15 Topic ID# 1
Hi Dwim,

Good point about the exclusive endpoints. I think your reworked
language fixes the problem...have tweaked it just a bit in an attempt
to simplify it; see what you think. Also, Marta had proposed a
variation on the name of the first time period that I liked, so I've
put that in as well. And since the Ring-bearers sailed in Sept. 3021,
I've adjusted the Great Years definition to "Stories set in or
between TA 3018 and TA 3021."

A. Which of these time periods is your story based in?

1. First Age and Earlier - Anything up to and including the overthrow
of Morgoth.

2. Second Age - Anything following the overthrow of Morgoth up to and
including the Last Alliance.

3. Early Third Age: Stories set in the Third Age before 2850. These
stories should draw from the histories of the cultures of Middle-
earth, and in most cases will not involve characters who feature
into "The Lord of the Rings".

4. Late Third Age: Stories set in or between the years TA 2850 and TA
3017. Stories in this category may include stories based around The
Hobbit or about the childhoods of the characters of LOTR.

5. The Great Years: Stories set in or between TA 3018 and TA 3021.
These stories should be set around events like the Quest to destroy
the Ring, pre-war politics in Rohan and Gondor, the occupation of the
Shire, the War of the Ring itself, and the aftermath of the Ring War
up to and including the sailing of the Ring-bearers from the Grey
Havens.

6. Fourth Age and Beyond - Stories about the events following the
sailing of the Ring-bearers, or crossovers between Middle-earth and
the modern world.

Kathy (Inkling)

--- In MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com, "dwimmer_laik" <dwimmer_laik@y...>
wrote:
>
> Just keep noting the errors. I'm sorry, I'm not paying a whole lot
of
> attention at the moment to coherence, just throwing things in
> piecemeal. Hopefully in a week, I'll be able to concentrate
properly.
>
> Also, look again at the timeline dates. I noticed we seemed to have
> exclusive endpoints in every single case. I tried fussing with that
a
> bit so that we don't get questions like: "But my story is *about*
the
> overthrow of Morgoth, where should *that* go if First Age is
> pre-overthrow and Second Age is defined as post-overthrow?"
>
> Dwim
>
> *********
>
>
> STORY FORM: Please read *all* instructions, and complete all fields
to
> the extent required.
>
> BASICS
>
> Title: [already provided]
> Author: [already provided]
> Summary: [author provides]
> Rating (if incorrect, please change): [MEFA drop-down]
> Warnings (please enter warnings you feel are appropriate)
> Romantic pairings (please see <link>'that which must be
> identified"</link> for explanation and options):
> URL (if not preferred site, please replace): [provided by nominator]
>
> Please choose *one* and *only one* from each of the following three
lists:
>
> My story is *predominantly*:
>
> 1. Bookverse: based on the writings of J.R.R. Tolkien and/or drafts
> made available by C. Tolkien
> 2. Filmverse: based on a film adaptation of "The Lord of the Rings"
or
> "The Hobbit"
>
> My story is:
>
> 1. Fiction
> 2. Non-fiction (if non-fiction, please skip to number 8 in
> "Subcategories")
>
>
> My story is best described as a...
>
> 1. Drabble (100 words exactly, plus 15 for title)
> 2. Drabble cycle (a series of individual drabbles connected by some
theme)
> 3. Ficlet (101 up to, but not including, 500 words)
> 4. Short Story (500-10,000 words)
> 5. Novella (10,001-50,000 words)
> 6. Novel (>50,000 words)
> 7. Poem (any length)
>
>
> MAIN CATEGORIES
>
> Please choose *one* and *only one* from each of the following lists.
> Your responses will help us to try to place your story in a MEFA
> category that is most appropriate.
>
> A. Which of these time periods is your story based in?
>
> 1. Before the end of the First Age - anything before or during the
> overthrow of Morgoth.
>
> 2. The Second Age - anything between the overthrow of Morgoth and
the
> Last Alliance, including stories about the latter event.
>
> 3. Early Third Age: Stories set in the Third Age *before* 2850.
These
> stories should draw from the histories of the cultures of
> Middle-earth, and in most cases will not involve characters who
> feature into "The Lord of the Rings".
>
> 4. Late Third Age: Stories set *in or between* the years TA 2850 and
> TA 3017. Stories in this category may include stories based around
The
> Hobbit or about the childhoods of the characters of LOTR.
>
> 5. The Great Years: Stories set *in or between* TA 3018 and TA 3022.
> These stories should be set around events like the Quest to destroy
> the Ring, pre-war politics in Rohan and Gondor, the occupation of
the
> Shire, the War of the Ring itself, and the aftermath of the Ring War
> before or about the sailing of the Ring-bearers from the Grey
Havens.
>
> 6. Fourth Age and Beyond - Stories about the events following the
> sailing of the Ring-bearers, or crossovers between Middle-earth and
> the modern world.
>
>
> B. Which of these genres best describes your story?
>
> 1. Action/Adventure
> 2. Alternate Universe
> 3. Crossover
> 4. Drama (includes Angst)
> 5. Horror
> 6. Humor
> 7. Mystery
> 8. Romance
>
> C. Which of the following types of characters would you say is the
> primary focus of your story?
>
> 1. Dwarves
> 2. Elves
> 3. Ents
> 4. Hobbits
> 5. Men
> 6. Valar/Ainur
> 7. Villains
> 8. Other
> 9. Story specifically interested in depicting and examining
> interspecies interactions
>
>
> D. Rank your category choices. In which of the above categories
would
> you *most prefer* your story to compete? Please list your first
> category choice first, and your last category choice third (e.g., A,
> C, B).
>
>
>
> SUBCATEGORIES
>
> Please fill in the following information./[Please select the
following
> from the drop-down lists provided or, if necessary, input the
required
> information in the "Other" textbox.] Your answers to these questions
> will help MEFA categorizers place your story into a <link FAQ
> explanation of...>subcategory</link>, subject to subcategory
viability
> rules. If you do NOT want your story to compete in a subcategory
based
> on the answer to a particular question (if, for example, your story
is
> set in Rohan but you do not want this to be its subcategory), OR if
> answering a question would serve as a spoiler to your story (e.g.,
> entering your story into subcategory "Bilbo" derived from question 2
> would give away who the narrator was, when keeping that information
> hidden for a time was important to your plot), please check the box
> "Decline to answer."
>
> 1. Where does your story primarily take place, or about which place
> does your story revolve (e.g., Gondolin, Houses of Healing,
Beleriand,
> Rohan, The Angle, The Shire, Angband etc.)? Please limit yourself to
> four or fewer main places.
>
> Check box: Decline to answer
>
> 2. Who are your *main* characters, in order of priority?
(Acknowledged
> groups such as "Fellowship", "Ringbearers", "Feanorians", etc., also
> useful here.) Please limit yourself to *four or fewer* main
> characters/groups of characters.
>
> Check box: Decline to answer
>
> 3. Which time periods *NOT* listed above does the story primarily
take
> place in/focus on (e.g., Pre-quest, Time of Trees, War of the Ring,
> etc.)? Please limit yourself to four or fewer times.
>
> Check box: Decline to answer
>
> 4. If your story is based on filmed versions of Tolkien's work,
which
> film/set of films is it based on?
>
> Check box: Decline to answer
>
> 5. Is there a major canonical event around which your story revolves
> (e.g., Akallabeth, destruction of Sirion, making of Khazad-dûm,
Battle
> of Unnumbered Tears, etc.)? Please limit yourself to four or fewer
events.
>
> Check box: Decline to answer
>
> 6. Is there a particular subgenre or form commonly used in fandom or
> film/literature that you think is applicable to and a good
description
> of your story that isn't represented above (e.g., metafic, noir,
> pastische, filk, etc.)?
>
> Check box: Decline to answer
>
> 7. If your story is a poem, what is its form (e.g., haiku, tanka,
> terzanelle, sonnet, free verse etc.)?
>
> Check box: Decline to answer
>
> 8. If your story is non-fiction, what is its main topic?
>
> Check box: Decline to answer
>
> 9. If your story is non-fiction, is it an essay (offering
> interpretation) or an article (research article meant to assist
others
> by gathering and presenting useful facts, but without offering an
> interpretation)?
>
> Check box: Decline to answer
>

Msg# 6447

Re: New file uploaded to MEFAwards Posted by aelfwina@cableone.net December 07, 2005 - 17:42:21 Topic ID# 1
This sounds very good to me--it is very inclusive and covers most
eventualities! I really like your definition of "Late Third Age" and "The
Great Years"--those are perfect, and so much more accurate than pre-Quest or
Quest.
Dreamflower
(Barbara)

----- Original Message -----
From: "Kathy" <inkling-tcbs@sbcglobal.net>
To: <MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Wednesday, December 07, 2005 2:58 PM
Subject: [MEFAwards] Re: New file uploaded to MEFAwards


Hi Dwim,

Good point about the exclusive endpoints. I think your reworked
language fixes the problem...have tweaked it just a bit in an attempt
to simplify it; see what you think. Also, Marta had proposed a
variation on the name of the first time period that I liked, so I've
put that in as well. And since the Ring-bearers sailed in Sept. 3021,
I've adjusted the Great Years definition to "Stories set in or
between TA 3018 and TA 3021."

A. Which of these time periods is your story based in?

1. First Age and Earlier - Anything up to and including the overthrow
of Morgoth.

2. Second Age - Anything following the overthrow of Morgoth up to and
including the Last Alliance.

3. Early Third Age: Stories set in the Third Age before 2850. These
stories should draw from the histories of the cultures of Middle-
earth, and in most cases will not involve characters who feature
into "The Lord of the Rings".

4. Late Third Age: Stories set in or between the years TA 2850 and TA
3017. Stories in this category may include stories based around The
Hobbit or about the childhoods of the characters of LOTR.

5. The Great Years: Stories set in or between TA 3018 and TA 3021.
These stories should be set around events like the Quest to destroy
the Ring, pre-war politics in Rohan and Gondor, the occupation of the
Shire, the War of the Ring itself, and the aftermath of the Ring War
up to and including the sailing of the Ring-bearers from the Grey
Havens.

6. Fourth Age and Beyond - Stories about the events following the
sailing of the Ring-bearers, or crossovers between Middle-earth and
the modern world.

Kathy (Inkling)

Msg# 6448

Re: Movie-verse versus Bookverse (Re: Question concerning Dwim's li Posted by Marta Layton December 07, 2005 - 22:29:21 Topic ID# 6411
Hi Rhapsody,

> Okay, I've been trying to follow this conversation the past days, but
> I am not sure if I understand completely why this is brought up for
> discussion.. It might have been the flu though ;)
>

Here's my understanding - also possibly wrong ;-) Last year we had a
movieverse category. It was in genres, but several people have
suggested it get moved to books/times. I agree, it fits there better.
Anyway, RSF requested a category for bookverse/movieverse blends, and
so this whole issue kind of got brought up because she and I seem to
have very differing definitions of what qualifies as "movieverse". So
much so that what she considers a blend, I consider pure movieverse in
most cases.

> > So that's at least part of the problem: we're using the terms
> > differently. If I don't see a story labelled as movieverse  and I
> > see an event that is in the movies but not in the books, I think of
> > it as an authors' mistakes. I don't mean movie-inspired pieces per
> > se, I just want to expect it. So for me as reader, I appreciate
> > having this material labelled. And this is for the authors' good as
> > much as anything else. My reading of an unlabelled movieverse story
> > will probably be less forgiving than my reading of one for which I
> > had fair expectations. It might be the difference between an 8 point
> >  and a 10 point review.
>
> Well, reading this I wonder... what if an author does thorough book
> research, but you (as a reader) think it is a movie thing (maybe
> because it feels a bit alike, or PJ dived more into the books than you
> assumed). What then? I think you need to be aware of this as well. We
> all can't know every single detail of what Tolkien wrote or stated, we
> all miss things when we read (or form our own idea about it)...
>

I think readers will always make mistakes. Not too long ago, I had a
story declined for the HASA public archives, and one of the comments
mentioned that Sam never felt the pull of the sea. (There's a quote at
the end of "The Grey Havens" that suggests at least to me that he
probably did.) WHile this wasn't a movieverse/bookverse question, it
was a case of the reader not remembering the appropriate portion of the
books and thinking I had made an error. It ended up costing me, but in
a way it was my fault. I could have very easily quoted the paragraph
from "The Grey Havens" in a footnote.

I'm rambling, I know. My point is that mistakes like this will always
happen. If an author thinks the majority of her readers won't remember
something about the canon source for the stories, he or she can save
his or her readers some frustration by putting in a quick quotation.

I think I might have not been clear yesterday. When I said I might
write a shorter review for an unlabelled movieverse story than a
labelled one, I didn't mean that I was actively penalising the author.
Rather, because of the way I read stories, I enjoy it a lot less if it
doesn't fit into other things I know about Middle-earth. If I know from
the get-go that a story is movieverse, I will have one series of events
in mind, and the movie will (hopefully!) fit into them and add a little
bit to that version of Middle-earth. If I don't know it's movieverse,
I'll be imagining Bergil running through Minas Tirith and Imrahil
leading his knights in a glorious charge somewhere just beyond the
edges of the story -- and if the Dead show up, it will upset my whole
vision of what's going on. It's no one's *fault*, really, just the way
things work with me.

> > For the purpose of categorisation, I'm less sure. I think the first
> > question we need to answer is whether movieverse stories should be
> > their own category, and if so why. If we answer that I think it will
> > be a lot easier to see what to do with blends.
>
> Well, this is something I have a hard time understanding currently...
> I mean didn't we had a movieverse category? And didn't it work quite
> well?
>

We did have that category, and it did work pretty well IMO. I ask this
question because I think if we can figure out why movieverse should be
a category, it may help us decide if blends also deserve thier own
category.

> >> Now when I think "Bookverse" I don't include anything from
> >> Tolkien's letters or HoME, or even Unfinished Tales.  If I were
> >> better acquainted with the Silmarillion, I'd definitely include
> >> that in my thinking, but mostly I think of The Hobbit and The Lord
> >> of the Rings (and in their "most corrected" form,at that) as being
> >> the basic canon of the Bookverse.
> >>
> >>  HoME, the Letters, etc., are in my noggin as "drafts and
> >> background material".
> >
> > Ah, the joys of being in such a complex canon! I'm for including the
> > drafts of Tolkien's posthumously published works just to avoid
> > controversy, because while the details might be different, the
> > *medium* is at least the same, and Tolkien himself had some hand in
> > choosing the details. Even if they weren't finished.
>
> Well the thing is here, especially with HOME is that Tolkien drafted
> so many versions of one event, that it is quite often contradicting.
> It is a great source for plotbunnies though, but I can imagine that
> when someone explores a HOME thing that covers an event in the
> Silmarillion that is contradicting... that would be very interesting
> to see how you guys want to see that as categorisation because
> technically: it isn't AU, you can quote canon on that.
>

I have to admit, I haven't read much beyond the Silm and the third age
and essays sections of UT. I know there are contradictions, but they
don't seem to be on the same scale as what you find in the first and
second age stuff. I'm honestly not sure how to resolve that for the
purpose of this award. I do think most authors who are on the fringe
between AU and in keepinbg with some version note this somewhere in
their stories. I remember seeing comments like "This story is compliant
with LOTR but not HOME 12" or something similar.

So I think I'm running out of suggestions here. Hopefully other people
can help untangle this mess. :-S

Marta

Msg# 6449

Movie-verse versus Bookverse (Re: Question concerning Dwim's list) Posted by dwimmer\_laik December 07, 2005 - 22:32:27 Topic ID# 6411
Doing this out of order for the sake of simplicity:

Rhapsody:
> > Well I am just recovering from it (the dreaded
disease) and I am
> asking basically *why* this is discussed because I
still can't follow
> the reasoning why.

Ok, here's how I understand the current debate:

The issue is understanding how to interpret the movieverse filter on
the proposed form, and how that understanding affects our way of
dealing with stories integrating *in some fashion* movies or books.
This issue is, I think, being organized around more or less explicit
questions such as:

How do we deal with fics that use both books and
movies?

Is it fair to put any fic involving movieverse
elements in with the movies, since not all fics using
movieverse elements are about the movies in the
end--authors may try to incorporate elements into
essentially bookverse fics?

Is there a category that could be formed out of
"blend" that would make conceptual sense and
*usefully* orient readers towards the stories therein? If so, and if
we create a third filter option of "both" in the BASIC section of the
form, do we make that a category?

If we don't use that filter to create a movieverse or blend category,
then, how do we use the filter for source material, if "movieverse"
doesn't really fit as a genre (like drama or whatnot, since movieverse
stories *are* dramatic, or comic, or action-adventure, or what have you)?

The new question added to the list is: if we did away
with the distinction between movieverse and bookverse
fics (dropped that filter), then would this cause more problems than
it would solve? Would such a move allow movieverse fics to be judged
unfairly?

> To me the main category movieverse worked
> brilliantly and I am wondering why movieverse is up
for discussion.

To be clear, I am not advocating being rid of
movieverse as a category--no where have I said this. That was a
question that came up because people started worrying, "How will I
categorize a story that has both book and movie
elements?"

Then that led to (I think) questions of wht is understood by "cnon",
how the mere categorization of a fic might influence reader perception
and expectations unfairly, and *ONE* suggestion was that we consider
whether it's a good idea to separate stories based on
movie versus books. Marta's response is, I take it, an argument
against doing away with the movieverse category because one very
popular way of approaching books versus movies is a
hierarchy in which the movies are judged as themselves
*fanfiction* interpretations of the
books--interpretations many people have opinions about
already. But if someone could come up with a good
argument for eliminating movieverse as a category,
she's saying she would be open to that. But only in
the face of a good argument.

> See above: I do clearly ask for clarification
because I really can't
> follow the discussion. It feels like many things are
getting mingled
> and it's highly confusing (especially when your mind
is foggy).

Does the above clarify things? Does what I've said seem like a good
summary of the thread to date, anyone else?

********


Other points:

Me (w.r.t. "The Great Adventure of Trotter and Bingo Baggins" example
form):
> > you can do that, and say in your author's notes or
summary, "I'm
> > relying on material from HoME that Tolkien
discarded." The forms can
> > accommodate this level of sophistication--I think
the concern, that
> > including the drafts as bookverse is misleading,
is not taking into
> > account the full range of data and the
manipulability of that data
> > that the form demands and can support.

Rhapsody:
> > I am not following this. How can a story based on
HOME be seen as
> misleading? I most certainly misread this, can you
explain it a bit
> more clearly?

No, I'm not saying that "a story based on
HOME [can] be seen as misleading", to quote you. I'm responding to
what I take to be your point: that the filter "bookverse", where
"bookverse" is understood as encompassing works Tolkien approved for
publications plus the drafts his son made available, *is* misleading
insofar as it sets up expectations about what counts as canon that may
be hard to defuse.

*My* point in that exchange was that those expectations can be offset
via other portions of the form, via author's notes and summaries
(which are up to the author to provide anyway), and that making those
other things bear the weight of distinguishing the complex
interrelations of Tolkien's corpus, both drafts (whether wholly his
own or edited by his son to whatever degree) and work published within
his lifetime, is a burden for the author to shoulder, not the MEFAs.

The upside of forcing the author to do that work is that we avoid, in
the context of the categorization form, any implicitly *normative*
answer to the unresolvable argument of what counts as canon or what
*should* be understood as more canonical within the set of draft works
and apparent gap-fillers Tolkien has written, while giving the author
the scope to set out his or her own understanding of how his or her
interpretation of canon governs the content and unfolding of the
story. "Bookverse: based on the stories of JRRT and the drafts made
available by C. Tolkien" is, I think, least controversial and least
complicated way of filtering stories *not* based on the films (in any
substantial, plot-relevant way). Additional qualifications internal to
the bookverse canon can be made using other portions of the form, and
it is *up to the author* to decide how to use those other portions and
what priority s/he wants to give them.

Therefore, I'm not yet convinced we have a problem accommodating HoME
and UT based stories that would require a change to the proposed form.
What we have currently is a filter motivated by pragmatism and
inclusivity. Let the authors work out, in the body of their works or
summaries, what is not reducible to a general form. The only thing we
need to decide is how to deal with movieverse elements--do we need a
"blend" category, and would such a category be cohesive enough to give
readers a general sense of what might be good ways of evaluating such
stories? I don't think we've answered that question yet.

In a previous e-mail, I filled out an example form to show how one
*might* use it in the case of a story based on a discarded draft of
LOTR--it is not in any way intended to be the *only* or definitive way
someone with a story based on HoME drafts or UT or what not should use
the form. The point was to show that the form can accommodate stories
based on drafts found in HoME that were explicitly discarded by
Tolkien, so that that case doesn't necessarily give us reason to think
we need to revise the form yet.

I asked others to try and show, by using similar examples, how the
form isn't working, because I'm frankly prone to being ok with
abstraction to a certain point, but then I need something more
concrete to work with, especially if it's a practical matter.

********

Rhapsody: > My point being is: are you gonna 'categorise' all
> stories that have a main plot element derived from
> HOME in the AU... with this reasoning?

No. See above explanation of what I was doing with the example and its
constraints as *only* an example.


********

Rhapsody:
> >> > >> Well, reading this I wonder... what if an author
does thorough book
> >> research, but you (as a reader) think it is a
movie thing (maybe
> >> because it feels a bit alike, or PJ dived more
into the books than
> >> you assumed). What then?

Me:
> > > > Can you cite an example where this is the case?
I'm not sure what
> > you're talking about here, other than a purely
hypothetical
> > scenario.

Rhapsody:
> > How about the scene where Isildur, Elendil and
Gil-Galad take on
> Sauron... well in the movie you don't see Gil-Galad
fighting that
> much, so what if the story appears to be a
re-telling of the tale on
> how Elendil fought Sauron (besides the whole
discussion what truly
> happened there and what/who brought Sauron down on
his knees). A
> reader can form an image in his/her head that it is
movieverse, while
> the author in question might have thoroughly
researched it.

Ok, if this were my story...

Another story form example (cut to include only the bits I think are
be relevant to this discussion) of how I might handle this sort of
thing, and following explanation.

BASICS

Title: The tale of the Fall of Sauron (again)
Author: Dwym the Evil Twyn
Summary: Gap-filler. We never see the last battle of Elendil with
Sauron. Here it is. I'm integrating PJ's interpretation of that battle
with the books' timeline, since they don't contradict each other.

Warnings: movieverse elements.

Please choose *one* and *only one* from each of the following three lists:

My story is *predominantly*:

2. Filmverse: based on a film adaptation of "The Lord of the Rings" or
"The Hobbit"

My story is:

1. Fiction


MAIN CATEGORIES

Please choose *one* and *only one* from each of the following lists.
Your responses will help us to try to place your story in a MEFA
category that is most appropriate.

A. Which of these time periods is your story based in?


2. The Second Age - anything between the overthrow of Morgoth and the
Last Alliance, including stories about the latter event.


B. Which of these genres best describes your story?

4. Drama (includes angst)


D. Rank your category choices. In which of the above categories would
you *most prefer* your story to compete? Please list your first
category choice first, and your last category choice third (e.g., A,
C, B).

A, B, C

SUBCATEGORIES

4. If your story is based on filmed versions of Tolkien's work, which
film/set of films is it based on?

Fellowship of the Ring: Peter Jackson.

This is how I'd fill out the form. I'd choose filmverse as my source
material, because although I want to integrate the movie into the book
timeline as a compatible gap-filler that I'm helping to fill in, and
although I've done my research, the major point of reference is the
filmed events. I'd use 2nd Age in the Times main category, and drama
in the genre category (I could see doing a this first person and
focusing on emotion rather than action, since the action is mainly
what you see in the movies, so why repeat that? But others might
choose other categories, obviously). I'd want my story to compete in
Times, so I rank that first because it'd make most sense to me, ymmv
depending on your own story.

I'd answer the subcategory question on the assumption that it's not a
secret I'm using the movies, nor is it a spoiler to tell which movie
I'm using should anyone want to know, at a glance, which one they'll
need to pop into the DVD player if they'd like to be reminded of how
the movieverse played out in this case.

And I use the warning option to give a blunt warning that I'm using
movieverse elements, then I use my summary (and/or perhaps author's
notes) to explain *how* I'm using the movies w.r.t. the books, *since*
I'm using PJ's version as a gap-filler that's ready-made.

I don't see this as a terribly controversial *type* of place to
situate a "blend"--the major point where research into the books comes
out is in determining that the movie gap-filler isn't directly
contradictory of the books up to the point where we see Elrond with
Isildur in the Sammath Naur. At that point, the two versions are
different, if your main text is the Silmarillion, but your example
didn't say we were including that part. Also, your example didn't say
we were including any material about the lead-up to the war against
Sauron, just the last fight of Elendil. Now, I might make one or two
references to stuff we know about from the books--the death of
Anárion, for example, but the overall look and feel, the choreography
and imagery and timing--all that is being supplied by the movie, so
that is the major source I'd list on the form because doing it that
way would make it clear at a glance what canon is most relevant to my
fic, and so most useful for readers to know and judge my story by.

Ok, so for completeness' sake, here are the options I see when it
comes to gap-filling the books and how one might deal with the use of
movieverse elements:

1) Create a whole new scene, as a bookverse
gap-filler, that borrows nothing from the movies and draws citable
background material only from the books and other, non-movie sources
that can be brought to bear on creating a world within the books that
is compatible with the books.

Form filter option: bookverse. If the author says that, we take
him or her at his or her word unless there is
*obvious* evidence that s/he has unconsciously drawn
on the movieverse and entered into the realm of 2
below (this would be, I think, where Marta's approach to bookverse
fics unexpectedly using movieverse elements fits in most logically).

2) Look at the movies, because they *do* offer already
a gap-filler scene that doesn't contradict the books, because the
books have nothing to say about the nitty-gritty staging, just a few
key events the movies don't contraadict. Use *that* as your basis for the
story, and follow the timeline and events of the
movies. This looks like your example above.

Form filter option: I'd classify this with pure movieverse gap-fillers
because there's practically nothing to say otherwise, and even though
one might pull in a few details from the books to flesh things out or
even to help set the movie scene, the *primary* source material
governing the story is gleaned from the movies' depiction of an event.

3) Look at the movies, because they *do* offer already
a gap-filler scene. Use only those parts that don't
conflict the books (which would mean working the movie
around the parts of the book that it *does* conflict
with) and then move into the bookverse timeline and
events.

Form filter option: This is the trickiest one to categorize, and I
take it is why some people are asking about "blend" as an option. I'd
go with bookverse but leave an author's note somewhere noting that
movieverse elements are being used in a very specific manner.

4) Look at the movies, because they *do* offer already
a gap-filler scene. Create new scenes based on the
movies' look and feel and those specific events, but
which don't follow the unfolding of the movie events
after a certain point, but also don't coincide with
the books.

Form filter option: bookverse. This I would call a movieverse AU and
should probably go in the AU category with a note either in the
warnings field, the filter field, or the summary/author's note, or all
three: this is an AU to the films.


*******

>For example, I might
write a very arrogant
> Boromir (with some good citations to back it up),
but she adores him
> and she doesn't agree with my intepretation of
Boromir at all.. am I
> rewarded with 2 points less then?

You seem to be concerned that it would be unfair, because the reader's
interpretation of your Boromir (even with citations) is incorrect, to
dock you two points.

It's frustrating when that happens, but so far as I can see, there is
absolutely nothing you can do about it, either in general or in these
particular awards. You cannot require someone to agree with
you--unforced force of reason is great, but it's not always effective
if someone doesn't want to be convinced. Yes, you have facts that can
support your position, and you can clearly say so-and-so is just blind
and be correct in your assessment that your interpretation is
better-supported than hers. But what mechanism could you install to
prevent that scenario? At a certain point, after the categorization
dust settles, it's a democratic voting process that explicitly forbids
a hierarchy of the reviewer-judges who could serve as a court of
appeal; that means so long as its a good faith effort to vote as
fairly as the person knows how, based on his or her best judgment
(which may be quite terrible, all things considered), there's no way
to penalize someone for voting on your story in a way that you would
consider reveals a fundamentally flawed understanding of X. Not every
reader is a good reader, but we don't require them to be such--nor do
we require them to be good writers, just as good as they are capable
of being.

The rest of the exchange seems more or less pointless to rehearse
here. If you honestly want me to answer the rest, e-mail me.

Dwim

Msg# 6450

Re: Movie-verse versus Bookverse (Re: Question concerning Dwim's li Posted by Marta Layton December 07, 2005 - 22:58:28 Topic ID# 6411
> If one disagrees with the characterization PJ used, that's a more
> subtle point, usually, and much more open to the "PJ did more research
> than you think" objection.
>
> <snip>
> So let's say someone characterizes Denethor as a right bastard who's
> unfit to rule in every important way, and I think to myself, "Gee, PJ
> did that too. This is a movieverse story, not a bookverse one." If I
> think that's not a great thing, but I think it's someone adhereing to
> the movieverse, I'm going to give that person points for working with
> flawed source material as best they can, but whether bookverse or
> movieverse, my review will be relatively short, because I just don't
> think that in *any* universe, that's a good characterization and so I
> won't enjoy the story as much.

Well, you guys who know me know that I would fall on the side of being
(vocally) critical of this characterisation of Denethor. But as much as
I hate to admit it, there are some events in the books that could lead
someone to a similar characterisation if interpreted a certain way.

You're right, characterisation is more open to interpretation. Either
the Elves did or didn't show up at Helm's Deep, and either Saruman did
or did not occupy the Shire, and so on. it might happen differently in
the books and in the movies, but there's no arguing that in the books
Haldir died at Helm's Deep. If you asked three people whether Denethor
as a bad leader is book!Denethor, movie!Denethor, or AU!Denethor,
you're likely to get three different answers.

So I think for the purposes of the MEFAs, whether a story is movieverse
or bookverse should be determined by the plot, not the
characterisation.

Marta

Msg# 6451

Movie-verse versus Bookverse (Re: Question concerning Dwim's list) Posted by dwimmer\_laik December 07, 2005 - 23:20:33 Topic ID# 6411
> Well, you guys who know me know that I would fall on the side of being
> (vocally) critical of this characterisation of Denethor. But as much as
> I hate to admit it, there are some events in the books that could lead
> someone to a similar characterisation if interpreted a certain way.

Hence the qualifier, "Unfit to rule in *every* respect"--all those who
know me know I am most definitely not on the light side of Denethor
interpretations for precisely the reason you name--there are passages
and events that lead to interpreting him as a right bastard... just
not one who's unfit to rule in *every* respect.

:-D

> You're right, characterisation is more open to interpretation. Either
> the Elves did or didn't show up at Helm's Deep, and either Saruman did
> or did not occupy the Shire, and so on. it might happen differently in
> the books and in the movies, but there's no arguing that in the books
> Haldir died at Helm's Deep.

In the books he doesn't die at HD, you mean.

Dwim, who likes her Denethor like other people like their coffee

Msg# 6452

Movie-verse versus Bookverse (Re: Question concerning Dwim's list) Posted by dwimmer\_laik December 07, 2005 - 23:24:45 Topic ID# 6411
--- In MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com, "dwimmer_laik" <dwimmer_laik@y...>
wrote:
>
>
> > Well, you guys who know me know that I would fall on the side of
being
> > (vocally) critical of this characterisation of Denethor. But as
much as
> > I hate to admit it, there are some events in the books that could
lead
> > someone to a similar characterisation if interpreted a certain way.
>
> Hence the qualifier, "Unfit to rule in *every* respect"

Ok, so I misquote myself--every important way. I think this is a sign
that it is time I went to bed.

G'night!

Dwim

Msg# 6453

Re: Movie-verse versus Bookverse (Re: Question concerning Dwim's li Posted by Marta Layton December 08, 2005 - 22:45:59 Topic ID# 6411
Hi Rhapsody,

> > Having done the research does not guarantee a good
> > interpretation, it just makes it less likely to be bad.
>
> Well that is a nice pat on the back for those authors who do spend
> loads of amounts on doing very thorough research but are questioned
> for canonical interpretation.
>

Rhapsody, I'm not 100% sure... was this sarcasm? It's so hard to tell
online.

I'm all for people doing research; I do a fair amount myself. I do
think we need to have a reasonable feel for what our readers can be
expected to know, and if something is more obscure than that, we should
take responsibility for "educating" them through authors' notes or
what-not.

> <snip>
> >
> >> I think you need to be aware of this as well. We all can't know
> << every single detail of what Tolkien wrote or stated, we all miss
> >> things when we read (or form our own idea about it)...
> >
> > You say "form our own idea about it" like this is both a bad thing
> > and an avoidable thing.
>
> Well that is your interpretation of my words. I surely didn't mention
> it that way. But when I read how Marta for example might give a person
> less points because of it.. I am very much for own interpretation
> because it is, for me, a good way to see a different perspective where
> I never thought of before. For example, I might write a very arrogant
> Boromir (with some good citations to back it up), but she adores him
> and she doesn't agree with my intepretation of Boromir at all.. am I
> rewarded with 2 points less then?
>

I think it's a fact of life that, if we choose a difficult or uncommon
characterisation, your piece has to be that much better to convince us
of it. If I were to write, for example, Faramir as sexually promiscuous
or or Feanor as a very sensitive kind of man (elf, you know what I
mean) I'd be working at a natural disadvantage. This doesn't mean those
stories can't work, but that they do need to be better to work. At
least for me.

I know there's more to this email, not to mention other emails that I
want to answer. But I have been feeling thoroughly depressed and
overwhelmed for several days now, and I really do need to turn in
early. I think anything I say at this point will come across as
snippety. So I'll do my best to get to the rest later. If I don't get
to it, please don't think that it means less or that I don't *want* to
or that I'm trying to ignore you. I'm just exhausted by various things
going on (most RL and unrelated to MEFAs).

Thanks for your patience!

Marta

Msg# 6454

Movie-verse versus Bookverse (Re: Question concerning Dwim's list) Posted by Kathy December 09, 2005 - 0:10:50 Topic ID# 6411
Marta,

Your health comes first...yours too, Rhapsody. The holidays are
stressful enough as it is and the MEFAs will keep. So get some rest
and take care of yourself!

Kathy (Inkling)

--- In MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com, Marta Layton <melayton@g...> wrote:
>
> Hi Rhapsody,
>
> > > Having done the research does not guarantee a good
> > > interpretation, it just makes it less likely to be bad.
> >
> > Well that is a nice pat on the back for those authors who do
spend
> > loads of amounts on doing very thorough research but are
questioned
> > for canonical interpretation.
> >
>
> Rhapsody, I'm not 100% sure... was this sarcasm? It's so hard to
tell
> online.
>
> I'm all for people doing research; I do a fair amount myself. I do
> think we need to have a reasonable feel for what our readers can be
> expected to know, and if something is more obscure than that, we
should
> take responsibility for "educating" them through authors' notes or
> what-not.
>
> > <snip>
> > >
> > >> I think you need to be aware of this as well. We all can't
know
> > << every single detail of what Tolkien wrote or stated, we all
miss
> > >> things when we read (or form our own idea about it)...
> > >
> > > You say "form our own idea about it" like this is both a bad
thing
> > > and an avoidable thing.
> >
> > Well that is your interpretation of my words. I surely didn't
mention
> > it that way. But when I read how Marta for example might give a
person
> > less points because of it.. I am very much for own interpretation
> > because it is, for me, a good way to see a different perspective
where
> > I never thought of before. For example, I might write a very
arrogant
> > Boromir (with some good citations to back it up), but she adores
him
> > and she doesn't agree with my intepretation of Boromir at all..
am I
> > rewarded with 2 points less then?
> >
>
> I think it's a fact of life that, if we choose a difficult or
uncommon
> characterisation, your piece has to be that much better to convince
us
> of it. If I were to write, for example, Faramir as sexually
promiscuous
> or or Feanor as a very sensitive kind of man (elf, you know what I
> mean) I'd be working at a natural disadvantage. This doesn't mean
those
> stories can't work, but that they do need to be better to work. At
> least for me.
>
> I know there's more to this email, not to mention other emails that
I
> want to answer. But I have been feeling thoroughly depressed and
> overwhelmed for several days now, and I really do need to turn in
> early. I think anything I say at this point will come across as
> snippety. So I'll do my best to get to the rest later. If I don't
get
> to it, please don't think that it means less or that I don't *want*
to
> or that I'm trying to ignore you. I'm just exhausted by various
things
> going on (most RL and unrelated to MEFAs).
>
> Thanks for your patience!
>
> Marta
>

Msg# 6455

Re: Movie-verse versus Bookverse (Re: Question concerning Dwim's li Posted by Marta Layton December 09, 2005 - 6:18:01 Topic ID# 6411
> > You're right, characterisation is more open to interpretation.
> Either
> > the Elves did or didn't show up at Helm's Deep, and either Saruman
> did
> > or did not occupy the Shire, and so on. it might happen differently
> in
> > the books and in the movies, but there's no arguing that in the
> books
> > Haldir died at Helm's Deep.
>
> In the books he doesn't die at HD, you mean.
>

Yeps, that is what I meant.

> Dwim, who likes her Denethor like other people like their coffee
>

What, hot? Somehow I don't think that's what you mean. ;-)

Marta

Msg# 6456

Re: Movie-verse versus Bookverse (Re: Question concerning Dwim's li Posted by Marta Layton December 09, 2005 - 8:27:26 Topic ID# 6411
jHi Dreamflower,

>> So that's at least part of the problem: we're using the terms
>> differently. If I don't see a story labelled as movieverse  and I see
>> an event that is in the movies but not in the books, I think of it as
>> an authors' mistakes. I don't mean movie-inspired pieces per se, I
>> just
>> want to expect it. So for me as reader, I appreciate having this
>> material labelled. And this is for the authors' good as much as
>> anything else. My reading of an unlabelled movieverse story will
>> probably be less forgiving than my reading of one for which I had
>> fair
>> expectations. It might be the difference between an 8 point and a 10
>> point review.
>
> ::Now, I have to say, I write what I think of as essentially
> book-verse
> stories.  Yet I often draw on visual elements and bits of
> characterizations
> that were inspired by the films, as long as they don't contradict the
> book.
> For example, JRRT never tells us the color of Frodo's or Pippin's
> eyes--so I
> don't feel there's anything amiss in using the color of the actors who
> played them.  And we are certainly never given a description of the
> hobbits'
> articles of dress, so mentioning Merry's yellow weskit or Pippin's
> scarf
> would certainly not fall into putting the story in movie-verse, to me.

I'd agree with you. I tend to be pretty much bookverse, too, but I'm
the first to admit that I've been *very* influenced by the movies when
it comes to how I see certain locations (most notably Moria and the
Shire, incidentally). I don't think that makes the story movieverse. I
think the movies have blessed us with a wealth of visual cues that
Tolkien could never have described and had them work as effectively.

I do think there are some visual elements that are movieverse if only
because they contradict the movies. For example, describing Faramir as
having auburn hair. In the books we are told very clearly that his hair
was raven-coloured, but in some of the movie scenes it looks so light
that it's almost red-coloured. I think movies can be used to fill in
the gbaps of the books just like the books can be used to fill in the
gaps in the movies. The key question is, where the movies and the books
differ, which version do you go with?

> On the other hand, sometimes people read into a story something
> that's not
> there.  In my very first story, I had a less than flattering
> protrayal of
> Denethor, my own interpretation of his character for over 30 years,
> from the
> time I read the book the first time.  Yet I had a reviewer who
> assumed I was
> writing "movie-verser Denethor".

Yes, readers can make mistakes like that. And I think among authors who
prefer bookverse anyway, there may be a tendency to label something
they don't like as movieverse (where applicable). Almost like calling
something movieverse is a stronger criticism than a simple "I don't
like this part".

I try not to do that, personally. If I don't like something, I will say
I don't like it. I have on occasion asked a writer why they chose a
certain characterisation (to see if they had any quotes that I wasn't
aware of, usually).

>> For the purpose of categorisation, I'm less sure. I think the first
>> question we need to answer is whether movieverse stories should be
>> their own category, and if so why. If we answer that I think it will
>> be
>> a lot easier to see what to do with blends.
>
> ::We had a movie-verse category, or was it sub-category? last year,
> and I
> think it seemed to work all right. I am afraid I would put this whole
> question to the old "if it ain't broke..." question.
>

It was a main category, in the genres division. We didn't have one in
2004.

And I should probably clarify my position. I like having a movieverse
category and think it works well. I'd love to see it moved to
Books/Times because I think it has more to do with source material than
anything. But since people are also proposing a main category for
bookverse-movieverse blends, I think it might help to see why we're
separating movieverse out. If we could see what makes movieverse
distinctive, we could decide whether blends deserve their own category
by the same arguments.

At one point I proposed having movieverse as a subcategory rather than
a main category. My thoughts are this: if the books/time categories are
going to be based around time periods, movieverse is a little different
because it covers the same years as what's already covered in other
categories (such as "Great Years"). I like having it asw a main
category, but the logician in me wants to have a reason for why we do
things the way we do.

So, bottom line: I like movieverse as a category. I would consider
creating a sub-category or not having it at all if people had a good
reason. But the main reason I'm asking this is to decide how to handle
blends.

>> Ah, the joys of being in such a complex canon! I'm for including the
>> drafts of Tolkien's posthumously published works just to avoid
>> controversy, because while the details might be different, the
>> *medium*
>> is at least the same, and Tolkien himself had some hand in choosing
>> the
>> details. Even if they weren't finished.
>
> ::I fall somewhere in between. I think of The Silm as more or less
> canon to
> the events which take place during those years.  I think of UT and
> Letters
> as "semi-canon"--useful for factoids that are not included in the
> finished
> works, and then I think of the rest as "quasi-canon", again useful for
> certain factoids, but not quite so much so, as the aforementioned
> works.
> All of them are to be treated with a certain amount of respect as
> revealing
> some of JRRT's own mind on certain matters, but I don't see them as
> "canon",
> except for The Silm.
>

I find this interesting. I know the Silm was published first, and I
think that's part of why people give it more weight. But isn't it also
more edited by CT than UT or even HOME? In UT and HOME we're given a
lot of drafts with notes by CT about when it was written in relation to
other things, and where it becomes illegible, etc. But in the Silm.
there's less to tell us what was JRRT's writing and what was CT's. (Can
you tell I don't think about this much? It's just not that relevant to
my writing.)

But my point is, what I personally consider canon isn't that relevant.
What's important is how most of the people writing stories that will be
nominated will use it. That's what's going to be most useful to these
awards.

>> And Rabidsamfan, at the risk of dividing the fandom into factions...
>> you write mostly hobbit fic, right? While there is certainly
>> information about hobbits in the Letters and HOME, but I think that
>> most of the *events* at least are set out in LOTR and TH. I honestly
>> can't imagine writing Gondor without knowing a lot more about the
>> history of Numenor than we see in the appendices. This is even more
>> true for the elves; I personally think the most interesting part
>> about
>> them are the allusions to the "deeper matters" that are only told in
>> full in the Silm, or UT. In my mind, if it doesn't contradict the
>> published books it's fair game.
>>
>> That's just my personal opinion, though. The main reason I'm allowing
>> C. Tolkien's stuff is it side-steps a controversy on what just is
>> canon. People have been arguing over that for decades, and I doubt
>> we'll settle them in a manner that everyone will agree with.
>
> ::You are quite right in noting that we hobbit writers have a lot more
> published material to draw on.  There's nothing wrong or divisive in
> pointing that out.
>
> Your statement in saying "if it doesn't contradict the published
> books it's
> fair game" is interesting, however, in the light of what you had to
> say
> about seeing movie-verse elements in a book-verse story. 8-)
>

I never claimed to be consistent. ;-) And maybe my thoughts are
changing, or maybe I'm just presenting myself more clearly. but see
what I said above about movieverse and bookverse. What makes a story
m/v or b/v are those points where the movies and books differ. At least
for me.

Marta

Msg# 6457

Re: New file uploaded to MEFAwards Posted by Marta Layton December 09, 2005 - 8:30:55 Topic ID# 1
On 7 Dec 2005, at 02:51, Kathy wrote:

> --- In MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com, Marta Layton <melayton@g...> wrote:
> >
> > I like it in the files, but Dwim, could you also post the form as a
> > post to the group? The posts are accessible to everyone, even
> > people who aren't members of the group. Specifically people in the
> > LJ. It would be nice to be able to point to a link that they could
> > see, too.
> >
>
> Before it gets posted anywhere else, I think there's still a date
> error:
>
> 3. Early Third Age: Stories set in the Third Age before 2900. These
> stories should draw from the histories of the cultures of Middle-
> earth, and in most cases will not involve characters who feature
> into "The Lord of the Rings".
>
> 4. Late Third Age: Stories set between TA 2850 and TA 3017. Stories in
> this category may include stories based around The Hobbit or about the
> childhood of the characters of LOTR.
>
> Since the date in #4 was changed to TA 2850, shouldn't it also be
> changed in #3?
>

Makes sense to me.

Marta

Msg# 6458

Re: New file uploaded to MEFAwards Posted by Marta Layton December 09, 2005 - 8:30:59 Topic ID# 1
> A. Which of these time periods is your story based in?
>
> 1. Before the end of the First Age - anything before or during the
> overthrow of Morgoth.
>
> 2. The Second Age - anything between the overthrow of Morgoth and the
> Last Alliance, including stories about the latter event.
>

How about:

1. First Age or Earlier - Anything before or during the overthrow of
Morgoth at the end of the First Age.

2. The Second Age - Anything after the overthrow of Morgoth, up to and
including the Last Alliance.

Marta

Msg# 6459

Re: New file uploaded to MEFAwards Posted by Marta Layton December 09, 2005 - 8:35:30 Topic ID# 1
On 7 Dec 2005, at 09:36, rhapsody_the_bard wrote:

> --- In MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com, "dwimmer_laik" <dwimmer_laik@y...>
> wrote:
> >
> > Just keep noting the errors. I'm sorry, I'm not paying a whole lot
> of
> > attention at the moment to coherence, just throwing things in
> > piecemeal. Hopefully in a week, I'll be able to concentrate
> properly.
> >
> > Also, look again at the timeline dates. I noticed we seemed to have
> > exclusive endpoints in every single case. I tried fussing with that
> a
> > bit so that we don't get questions like: "But my story is *about*
> the
> > overthrow of Morgoth, where should *that* go if First Age is
> > pre-overthrow and Second Age is defined as post-overthrow?"
>
> Well given the fact that first Morgoth was overthrown.. before the
> breaking of Beleriand (which marks the end of the First Age), so a
> story featuring that will always fit in the First Age. A story about
> the consequences of the breaking of Beleriand (elven races settling in
> Middle Earth, the Edain settling on Numenor), that would be a complete
> different ballgame.
>

I thought the breaking of Beleriand was the result of Morgoth's
fortress being broken, and that the two events were really part of the
same event. But it's been a long time since I've read the Silm, so
maybe I'm wrong.

I wonder if we're making this too complicated. Should we maybe not list
events at all in the descriptions? If it's in the Age of the Trees or
the First Age or whatever before the end of the First Age, then it's
"First Age and Earlier". If it's during the Second Age, it's in "Second
Age". If it's set before 2850 it's in "Early Third Age". And so on.

Marta

Msg# 6460

Re: New file uploaded to MEFAwards Posted by Marta Layton December 09, 2005 - 8:41:58 Topic ID# 1
>

Okay, I'm going to get my thoughts together "for real" this time. Sorry
about the multiple messages as I work my way through the posts. :-)

How would this work for category descriptions. This is based on
Inkling's version, with some slight tweaking on the wording.

1. First Age and Earlier - Anything set before the beginning of the
Second Age. This would include the creation of Middle-earth, the elves
in Valinor before the Noldor returned to Middle-earth, and all the
events and wars revolving around the silmarils.

2. Second Age - Anything set during the Second Age. Major events are
the forging of the Elven-rings, the history of Númenor, and the Last
Alliance.

3. Early Third Age - Anything set between FA 1 and FA 2849 (including
those years). These stories will draw from the histories of the
cultures of Middle-earth, and in most cases will not involve characters
who feature into "The Lord of the Rings".

4. Late Third Age - Anything set between TA 2850 and TA 3017 (including
those years). Stories in this category may include stories based around
The Hobbit or about the childhoods of the characters of LOTR.

5. The Great Years - Anything set between TA 3018 and TA 3021
(including those years). These stories should be set around events like
the Quest to destroy the Ring, events in Rohan and Gondor leading up to
the War of the Ring, the occupation of the Shire, the War of the Ring
itself, and the aftermath of the Ring War up to and including the
departure of the Ring-bearers from the Grey Havens.

6. Fourth Age and Beyond - Stories about the events following the
sailing of the Ring-bearers, or stories involving both Middle-earth and
the modern world.

7. Multi-Age - Stories that include events set in more than one of the
above categories.

Cheers,
Marta

Msg# 6461

Re: New file uploaded to MEFAwards Posted by Marta Layton December 09, 2005 - 8:42:59 Topic ID# 1
On 7 Dec 2005, at 16:37, <aelfwina@cableone.net> wrote:

> This sounds very good to me--it is very inclusive and covers most
> eventualities!  I really like your definition of "Late Third Age" and
> "The
> Great Years"--those are perfect, and so much more accurate than
> pre-Quest or
> Quest.
> Dreamflower
> (Barbara)
>

Oh, I loved that Kathy - it really was perfect. My changes were to make
a few things more clear, but really, I used almost all of what you had
and couldn't have done my revision without yours.

Marta

Msg# 6462

movieverse, canon, AU Posted by Marta December 09, 2005 - 10:03:16 Topic ID# 6462
Hey guys,

(I meant to post this last night but accidentally sent it to the wrong list.)

I'm more than a bit behind on the posts, and I'll try to answer a few of them tonight.
However, I think we're getting a bit circular, partially because we're either arguing the
points more than needs to be for the point of these awards are, and partly because we're
using the terms differently. We don't need to come up with a definitive answer to what
canon is (for example), but we do need to look at what they'll mean in the context of these
awards. That has a lot to do with how most people mean by them and less with what is
rigorously "true".

With that in mind, I propose the following distinctions. If you think they won't work, please
feel free to reply.

Movie-verse stories contain some plot element that follow an adaptation of JRRT's works
rather than the books themselves where the two difer. A movieverse story may use the
books to augment the movies in areas the movies do not address.

Book-verse stories are just the opposite. They do not contain plot elements that follow an
adaptation of JRRT's works rather than the books themselves where the two differ. It can
use the movies to augment the books in areas the books are silent. In the case of different
drafts and so on, the canon is either the published version of events, or the draft that the
author identifies that they are following.. So if an author is writing about Celeborn-as-
Teleri (as opposed to Celeborn-as-Sinda in the Silm), they are following book canon if they
tell us they are going with that version of events. Unless specifically stated otherwise,
readers can assume the author is following the version of events set forth in JRRT's books
TH, LOTR, and (in the case of 1st-2nd Age events not laidout in TH or LOTR) the Silm.

An AU story is a purposeful attempt to ask "what if" the canon material had been different.
Basing a story around a different draft than the publoished books doesn't make it AU, it
just means you're following a different canon. Both movieverse and bookverse stories can
be AU -- for instance, Eowyn stays with Theoden to fight the Wargs on the way to Helm's
Deep (movieverse) or Gollum is killed trying to escape from Mirkwood (bookverse,
probably).

Marta

Msg# 6463

Re: New file uploaded to MEFAwards Posted by Kathy December 10, 2005 - 2:48:37 Topic ID# 1
Sounds good to me, Marta. However, being a compulsive proofreader, I
noticed that in #3 you put "FA" when you meant "TA." Just wanted to
mention it in case this gets cut and pasted...

Kathy (Inkling)

--- In MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com, Marta Layton <melayton@g...> wrote:
>
> >
>
> Okay, I'm going to get my thoughts together "for real" this time.
Sorry
> about the multiple messages as I work my way through the posts. :-)
>
> How would this work for category descriptions. This is based on
> Inkling's version, with some slight tweaking on the wording.
>
> 1. First Age and Earlier - Anything set before the beginning of the
> Second Age. This would include the creation of Middle-earth, the
elves
> in Valinor before the Noldor returned to Middle-earth, and all the
> events and wars revolving around the silmarils.
>
> 2. Second Age - Anything set during the Second Age. Major events
are
> the forging of the Elven-rings, the history of Númenor, and the
Last
> Alliance.
>
> 3. Early Third Age - Anything set between FA 1 and FA 2849
(including
> those years). These stories will draw from the histories of the
> cultures of Middle-earth, and in most cases will not involve
characters
> who feature into "The Lord of the Rings".
>
> 4. Late Third Age - Anything set between TA 2850 and TA 3017
(including
> those years). Stories in this category may include stories based
around
> The Hobbit or about the childhoods of the characters of LOTR.
>
> 5. The Great Years - Anything set between TA 3018 and TA 3021
> (including those years). These stories should be set around events
like
> the Quest to destroy the Ring, events in Rohan and Gondor leading
up to
> the War of the Ring, the occupation of the Shire, the War of the
Ring
> itself, and the aftermath of the Ring War up to and including the
> departure of the Ring-bearers from the Grey Havens.
>
> 6. Fourth Age and Beyond - Stories about the events following the
> sailing of the Ring-bearers, or stories involving both Middle-earth
and
> the modern world.
>
> 7. Multi-Age - Stories that include events set in more than one of
the
> above categories.
>
> Cheers,
> Marta
>

Msg# 6464

Re: New file uploaded to MEFAwards Posted by Kathy December 10, 2005 - 2:54:46 Topic ID# 1
Well, I'd say it was a group effort! :)

Kathy (Inkling)

--- In MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com, Marta Layton <melayton@g...> wrote:
>
>
> On 7 Dec 2005, at 16:37, <aelfwina@c...> wrote:
>
> > This sounds very good to me--it is very inclusive and covers most
> > eventualities!  I really like your definition of "Late Third
Age" and
> > "The
> > Great Years"--those are perfect, and so much more accurate than
> > pre-Quest or
> > Quest.
> > Dreamflower
> > (Barbara)
> >
>
> Oh, I loved that Kathy - it really was perfect. My changes were to
make
> a few things more clear, but really, I used almost all of what you
had
> and couldn't have done my revision without yours.
>
> Marta
>

Msg# 6465

Re: New file uploaded to MEFAwards Posted by rhapsody\_the\_bard December 10, 2005 - 3:38:40 Topic ID# 1
--- In MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com, Marta Layton <melayton@g...> wrote:
>
>
> On 7 Dec 2005, at 09:36, rhapsody_the_bard wrote:
>
> > --- In MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com, "dwimmer_laik" <dwimmer_laik@y...>
> > wrote:
> > >
> > > Just keep noting the errors. I'm sorry, I'm not paying a whole lot
> > of
> > > attention at the moment to coherence, just throwing things in
> > > piecemeal. Hopefully in a week, I'll be able to concentrate
> > properly.
> > >
> > > Also, look again at the timeline dates. I noticed we seemed to have
> > > exclusive endpoints in every single case. I tried fussing with
that
> > a
> > > bit so that we don't get questions like: "But my story is *about*
> > the
> > > overthrow of Morgoth, where should *that* go if First Age is
> > > pre-overthrow and Second Age is defined as post-overthrow?"
> >
> > Well given the fact that first Morgoth was overthrown.. before the
> > breaking of Beleriand (which marks the end of the First Age), so a
> > story featuring that will always fit in the First Age. A story about
> > the consequences of the breaking of Beleriand (elven races
settling in
> > Middle Earth, the Edain settling on Numenor), that would be a
complete
> > different ballgame.
> >
>
> I thought the breaking of Beleriand was the result of Morgoth's
> fortress being broken, and that the two events were really part of
> the same event. But it's been a long time since I've read the Silm,
> so maybe I'm wrong.

No. Eonwe and his host overpowered Morgoth, made sure he got thrown
behind the Doors of the Night, but then you have the aftermath with
the Silmarils, the remaining Feanorian's walking away with them and
Maglor casting it into the sea, Elves being called home, this covers
some years after that. With your reasoning, you press the stop button
when they cast out Morgoth and you place all stories about the
'aftermath' with the Silmarils into the Second Age. I think you're
confusing it a bit with the first time the Valar overthrew Morgoth,
where they chained him and let him live on Aman ánd tore of the roof
of Angband to get him.

> I wonder if we're making this too complicated. Should we maybe not
> list events at all in the descriptions? If it's in the Age of the
> Trees or the First Age or whatever before the end of the First Age,
> then it's "First Age and Earlier". If it's during the Second Age,
> it's in "Second Age". If it's set before 2850 it's in "Early Third
> Age". And so on.

I don't know why this is happening as well. For the sake of
transparency maybe? But then we need to be careful with assumptions.

I am mainly a Silm writer (well at this moment), so that might explain
it why it caught my eye.

Rhapsody

Msg# 6466

web hosting Posted by Marta Layton December 10, 2005 - 15:43:23 Topic ID# 6466
Hey guys,

I think we're reaching agreement on a lot of the categories issues.
There's still some stuff to nail down, and I don't want to just forget
about the remaining things we're still discussing. But I think things
are slowing down enough that we can start looking at the next topic,
which I think (hope!) won't be as controversial.

The way it works now, our website is run from a computer at
Ainaechoiriel's house.

The obvious advantage of this set-up is that it's free to the MEFAs; no
one has to pay for the website, and I think everyone agrees that it's
much easier to do things through the website instead of through the
Yahoo group like we did in 2004.

The main disadvantage is down time. If anything should happen to
Ainae's computer or the internet connection, the pages that begin with
http://gabrielle.sytes.net/ won't load until someone can fix the
problem. Since the site is run off of a computer at Ainae's house, the
site may be down until someone can get there and fix the problem. (Some
problems can be fixed remotely, by Ainae at work, but not always - if,
for example, a cat accidentally turns the computer off, someone has to
physically press a button.)

The problem is that so much of what happens with our website is
time-sensitive. With people in different time-zones and with different
schedules, if the site is down for even a few hours near the end of
voting season or nominating season, we could have a real problem on our
hands. Sure, we can extend those seasons by a day or two like we did
this year (2005), but I think the website being down still causes a lot
of frustration.

The only solution that I can think of is to go with a web hosting
company. There would be several advantages:

1. It would probably give us more bandwidth. This means that pages
would load quicker.

2. If the site does go down, the problem could be resolved quicker. The
machine would be at a location where there are people to handle this
sort of thing, so we wouldn't have to wait for someone to get there
like we do now.

3. We could get a domain name that's more obvious. Something like
http://www.mefawards.com/ . I think this would make things less
confusing for people new to the awards.

4. Right now, Anthony has to email updates to Ainae who installs them.
With a professional site Anthony could install them himself.

The main disadvantage is that someone has to actually *pay* for it.
When Anthony, Sulriel, and I discussed the possibility of doing this,
we found several packages that provided what we needed for around
$10/mo. The exact cost varied from company to company, of course, but I
think we could do this for about $150/year. We could raise that if ten
people would each donate $15 to cover the cost of a year's hosting. I
don't think that's too much of a burden for most people, when you
consider how much we use the website over the course of the year.

So what do you guys think? Is this something people are interested in
doing? Are people willing to chip in to help cover the costs? I think
this would really help the MEFAs, but I can't cover the whole cost
myself. If there are enough people interested in making this happen we
can start discussing specifics.

Oh, and I want to make one thing perfectly clear: If for whatever
reason you really can't afford to help out financially, that's okay. I
don't know everyone's financial situation (and don't need to), and I
want everyone to feel free to participate in whatever way they can.
Giving the MEFAs your time (as a volunteer or just by reading stories)
is contributing, too.

Marta

Msg# 6467

Re: web hosting Posted by Marta December 10, 2005 - 23:35:27 Topic ID# 6466
Hey guys,

After re-reading this post it occurred to me that maybe I wasn't clear
on one crucial thing: I talked to Ainae about this several weeks ago,
and she said she doesn't have a problem with us moving the website to
a professional server, if we decide we want to do that.

Marta

--- In MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com, Marta Layton <melayton@g...> wrote:
>
> Hey guys,
>
> I think we're reaching agreement on a lot of the categories issues.
> There's still some stuff to nail down, and I don't want to just forget
> about the remaining things we're still discussing. But I think things
> are slowing down enough that we can start looking at the next topic,
> which I think (hope!) won't be as controversial.
>
> The way it works now, our website is run from a computer at
> Ainaechoiriel's house.
>
> The obvious advantage of this set-up is that it's free to the MEFAs; no
> one has to pay for the website, and I think everyone agrees that it's
> much easier to do things through the website instead of through the
> Yahoo group like we did in 2004.
>
> The main disadvantage is down time. If anything should happen to
> Ainae's computer or the internet connection, the pages that begin with
> http://gabrielle.sytes.net/ won't load until someone can fix the
> problem. Since the site is run off of a computer at Ainae's house, the
> site may be down until someone can get there and fix the problem. (Some
> problems can be fixed remotely, by Ainae at work, but not always - if,
> for example, a cat accidentally turns the computer off, someone has to
> physically press a button.)
>
> The problem is that so much of what happens with our website is
> time-sensitive. With people in different time-zones and with different
> schedules, if the site is down for even a few hours near the end of
> voting season or nominating season, we could have a real problem on our
> hands. Sure, we can extend those seasons by a day or two like we did
> this year (2005), but I think the website being down still causes a lot
> of frustration.
>
> The only solution that I can think of is to go with a web hosting
> company. There would be several advantages:
>
> 1. It would probably give us more bandwidth. This means that pages
> would load quicker.
>
> 2. If the site does go down, the problem could be resolved quicker. The
> machine would be at a location where there are people to handle this
> sort of thing, so we wouldn't have to wait for someone to get there
> like we do now.
>
> 3. We could get a domain name that's more obvious. Something like
> http://www.mefawards.com/ . I think this would make things less
> confusing for people new to the awards.
>
> 4. Right now, Anthony has to email updates to Ainae who installs them.
> With a professional site Anthony could install them himself.
>
> The main disadvantage is that someone has to actually *pay* for it.
> When Anthony, Sulriel, and I discussed the possibility of doing this,
> we found several packages that provided what we needed for around
> $10/mo. The exact cost varied from company to company, of course, but I
> think we could do this for about $150/year. We could raise that if ten
> people would each donate $15 to cover the cost of a year's hosting. I
> don't think that's too much of a burden for most people, when you
> consider how much we use the website over the course of the year.
>
> So what do you guys think? Is this something people are interested in
> doing? Are people willing to chip in to help cover the costs? I think
> this would really help the MEFAs, but I can't cover the whole cost
> myself. If there are enough people interested in making this happen we
> can start discussing specifics.
>
> Oh, and I want to make one thing perfectly clear: If for whatever
> reason you really can't afford to help out financially, that's okay. I
> don't know everyone's financial situation (and don't need to), and I
> want everyone to feel free to participate in whatever way they can.
> Giving the MEFAs your time (as a volunteer or just by reading stories)
> is contributing, too.
>
> Marta
>

Msg# 6468

Re: web hosting Posted by Kathy December 11, 2005 - 1:00:25 Topic ID# 6466
I'd be willing to contribute to this.

Kathy (Inkling)

--- In MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com, "Marta" <melayton@g...> wrote:
>
> Hey guys,
>
> After re-reading this post it occurred to me that maybe I wasn't
clear
> on one crucial thing: I talked to Ainae about this several weeks
ago,
> and she said she doesn't have a problem with us moving the website
to
> a professional server, if we decide we want to do that.
>
> Marta
>
> --- In MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com, Marta Layton <melayton@g...>
wrote:
> >
> > Hey guys,
> >
> > I think we're reaching agreement on a lot of the categories
issues.
> > There's still some stuff to nail down, and I don't want to just
forget
> > about the remaining things we're still discussing. But I think
things
> > are slowing down enough that we can start looking at the next
topic,
> > which I think (hope!) won't be as controversial.
> >
> > The way it works now, our website is run from a computer at
> > Ainaechoiriel's house.
> >
> > The obvious advantage of this set-up is that it's free to the
MEFAs; no
> > one has to pay for the website, and I think everyone agrees that
it's
> > much easier to do things through the website instead of through
the
> > Yahoo group like we did in 2004.
> >
> > The main disadvantage is down time. If anything should happen to
> > Ainae's computer or the internet connection, the pages that begin
with
> > http://gabrielle.sytes.net/ won't load until someone can fix the
> > problem. Since the site is run off of a computer at Ainae's
house, the
> > site may be down until someone can get there and fix the problem.
(Some
> > problems can be fixed remotely, by Ainae at work, but not always -
if,
> > for example, a cat accidentally turns the computer off, someone
has to
> > physically press a button.)
> >
> > The problem is that so much of what happens with our website is
> > time-sensitive. With people in different time-zones and with
different
> > schedules, if the site is down for even a few hours near the end
of
> > voting season or nominating season, we could have a real problem
on our
> > hands. Sure, we can extend those seasons by a day or two like we
did
> > this year (2005), but I think the website being down still causes
a lot
> > of frustration.
> >
> > The only solution that I can think of is to go with a web hosting
> > company. There would be several advantages:
> >
> > 1. It would probably give us more bandwidth. This means that
pages
> > would load quicker.
> >
> > 2. If the site does go down, the problem could be resolved
quicker. The
> > machine would be at a location where there are people to handle
this
> > sort of thing, so we wouldn't have to wait for someone to get
there
> > like we do now.
> >
> > 3. We could get a domain name that's more obvious. Something like
> > http://www.mefawards.com/ . I think this would make things less
> > confusing for people new to the awards.
> >
> > 4. Right now, Anthony has to email updates to Ainae who installs
them.
> > With a professional site Anthony could install them himself.
> >
> > The main disadvantage is that someone has to actually *pay* for
it.
> > When Anthony, Sulriel, and I discussed the possibility of doing
this,
> > we found several packages that provided what we needed for around
> > $10/mo. The exact cost varied from company to company, of course,
but I
> > think we could do this for about $150/year. We could raise that
if ten
> > people would each donate $15 to cover the cost of a year's
hosting. I
> > don't think that's too much of a burden for most people, when you
> > consider how much we use the website over the course of the year.
> >
> > So what do you guys think? Is this something people are
interested in
> > doing? Are people willing to chip in to help cover the costs? I
think
> > this would really help the MEFAs, but I can't cover the whole
cost
> > myself. If there are enough people interested in making this
happen we
> > can start discussing specifics.
> >
> > Oh, and I want to make one thing perfectly clear: If for whatever
> > reason you really can't afford to help out financially, that's
okay. I
> > don't know everyone's financial situation (and don't need to),
and I
> > want everyone to feel free to participate in whatever way they
can.
> > Giving the MEFAs your time (as a volunteer or just by reading
stories)
> > is contributing, too.
> >
> > Marta
> >
>

Msg# 6469

Re: New file uploaded to MEFAwards Posted by Marta Layton December 11, 2005 - 7:31:49 Topic ID# 1
> Message: 1
> Date: Sat, 10 Dec 2005 08:48:15 -0000
> From: "Kathy" <inkling-tcbs@sbcglobal.net>
> Subject:
>
> Sounds good to me, Marta. However, being a compulsive proofreader, I
> noticed that in #3 you put "FA" when you meant "TA." Just wanted to
> mention it in case this gets cut and pasted...
>
> Kathy (Inkling)
>

Yep, thanks for catcfhing that.

Marta

> --- In MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com, Marta Layton <melayton@g...> wrote:
>>
>>>
>>
>> Okay, I'm going to get my thoughts together "for real" this time.
> Sorry
>> about the multiple messages as I work my way through the posts. :-)
>>
>> How would this work for category descriptions. This is based on
>> Inkling's version, with some slight tweaking on the wording.
>>
>> 1. First Age and Earlier - Anything set before the beginning of the
>> Second Age. This would include the creation of Middle-earth, the
> elves
>> in Valinor before the Noldor returned to Middle-earth, and all the
>> events and wars revolving around the silmarils.
>>
>> 2. Second Age - Anything set during the Second Age. Major events
> are
>> the forging of the Elven-rings, the history of Númenor, and the
> Last
>> Alliance.
>>
>> 3. Early Third Age - Anything set between FA 1 and FA 2849
> (including
>> those years). These stories will draw from the histories of the
>> cultures of Middle-earth, and in most cases will not involve
> characters
>> who feature into "The Lord of the Rings".
>>
>> 4. Late Third Age - Anything set between TA 2850 and TA 3017
> (including
>> those years). Stories in this category may include stories based
> around
>> The Hobbit or about the childhoods of the characters of LOTR.
>>
>> 5. The Great Years - Anything set between TA 3018 and TA 3021
>> (including those years). These stories should be set around events
> like
>> the Quest to destroy the Ring, events in Rohan and Gondor leading
> up to
>> the War of the Ring, the occupation of the Shire, the War of the
> Ring
>> itself, and the aftermath of the Ring War up to and including the
>> departure of the Ring-bearers from the Grey Havens.
>>
>> 6. Fourth Age and Beyond - Stories about the events following the
>> sailing of the Ring-bearers, or stories involving both Middle-earth
> and
>> the modern world.
>>
>> 7. Multi-Age - Stories that include events set in more than one of
> the
>> above categories.
>>
>> Cheers,
>> Marta
>>
>

Msg# 6470

Re: New file uploaded to MEFAwards Posted by Marta Layton December 11, 2005 - 7:36:34 Topic ID# 1
> Message: 3
> Date: Sat, 10 Dec 2005 09:37:30 -0000
> From: "rhapsody_the_bard" <rhapsody74@gmail.com>
> Subject: Re: New file uploaded to MEFAwards
>
> <snip>
>> I thought the breaking of Beleriand was the result of Morgoth's
>> fortress being broken, and that the two events were really part of
>> the same event. But it's been a long time since I've read the Silm,
>> so maybe I'm wrong.
>
> No. Eonwe and his host overpowered Morgoth, made sure he got thrown
> behind the Doors of the Night, but then you have the aftermath with
> the Silmarils, the remaining Feanorian's walking away with them and
> Maglor casting it into the sea, Elves being called home, this covers
> some years after that. With your reasoning, you press the stop button
> when they cast out Morgoth and you place all stories about the
> 'aftermath' with the Silmarils into the Second Age. I think you're
> confusing it a bit with the first time the Valar overthrew Morgoth,
> where they chained him and let him live on Aman ánd tore of the roof
> of Angband to get him.
>

Thanks for the clarification. I'm the first to admit that I'm no master
of the Silm; I've only read it once. What you're saying sounds vaguely
familiar from that one read. And as you know more about this than I do,
I'd probably trust you anyway. ;-)

>> I wonder if we're making this too complicated. Should we maybe not
>> list events at all in the descriptions? If it's in the Age of the
>> Trees or the First Age or whatever before the end of the First Age,
>> then it's "First Age and Earlier". If it's during the Second Age,
>> it's in "Second Age". If it's set before 2850 it's in "Early Third
>> Age". And so on.
>
> I don't know why this is happening as well. For the sake of
> transparency maybe? But then we need to be careful with assumptions.
>

I've reworded the category descriptions, hopefully making it clearer
when the different periods end. I've given some major events as
examples of the kind of stories that might appear in each category, but
not as the beginning and end points. Does this work for you?

> I am mainly a Silm writer (well at this moment), so that might explain
> it why it caught my eye.
>

Thanks for keeping an eye out. I really am most fmailiar with the Third
Age, so it's good to have a bit of balance.

Marta

Msg# 6471

Re: Digest Number 584 Posted by Marta Layton December 11, 2005 - 7:38:16 Topic ID# 6471
> Message: 6
> Date: Sun, 11 Dec 2005 07:00:18 -0000
> From: "Kathy" <inkling-tcbs@sbcglobal.net>
> Subject: Re: web hosting
>
> I'd be willing to contribute to this.
>
> Kathy (Inkling)
>

Thanks, Kathy.

Over at the LJ community two people have already said they'd be
interested in contributing.

Marta

Msg# 6472

Re: Digest Number 584 Posted by sulriel December 11, 2005 - 7:54:00 Topic ID# 6471
count me in.

have you set up a paypal account? or how will you collect funds?



--- In MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com, Marta Layton <melayton@g...> wrote:
>
> > Message: 6
> > Date: Sun, 11 Dec 2005 07:00:18 -0000
> > From: "Kathy" <inkling-tcbs@s...>
> > Subject: Re: web hosting
> >
> > I'd be willing to contribute to this.
> >
> > Kathy (Inkling)
> >
>
> Thanks, Kathy.
>
> Over at the LJ community two people have already said they'd be
> interested in contributing.
>
> Marta
>

Msg# 6473

Re: New file uploaded to MEFAwards Posted by rhapsody\_the\_bard December 11, 2005 - 10:33:52 Topic ID# 1
--- In MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com, Marta Layton <melayton@g...> wrote:

> Thanks for the clarification. I'm the first to admit that I'm no
> master of the Silm; I've only read it once. What you're saying
> sounds vaguely familiar from that one read. And as you know more
> about this than I do, I'd probably trust you anyway. ;-)
>
Well you know... actually I was going trough ROTK yesterday, the
appendices and this is what the appendices says (no actual dates, but
you can see that the First Age didn't end with Morgoth's capture and
throwing him behind the Doors of the night):

APPENDIX B
THE TALE OF YEARS
(CHRONOLOGY OF THE WESTLANDS)
The First Age ended with the Great Battle, in which the Host of
Valinor broke Thangorodrim and overthrew Morgoth. Then most of the
Noldor returned into the Far West and dwelt in Eressëa within sight
of Valinor; and many of the Sindar went over Sea also.

The Second Age ended with the first overthrow of Sauron, servant of
Morgoth. and the taking of the One Ring.
The Third Age came to its end in the War of the Ring; but the Fourth
Age was not held to have begun until Master Elrond departed, and the
time was come for the dominion of Men and the decline of all other
'speaking-peoples' in Middle-earth.
In the Fourth Age the earlier ages were often called the Elder Days;
but that name was properly given only to the days before the casting
out of Morgoth. The histories of that time are not recorded here.


So this is a pretty good reference by the professor himself :)

Rhapsody

Msg# 6474

Re: web hosting Posted by aelfwina@cableone.net December 11, 2005 - 12:56:29 Topic ID# 6466
I wouldn't mind making a small contribution. I've also an idea of how the
MEFAs could raise funds to maintain things in the future. How about a Cafe
Press shop? I know I'd definitely spring for a MEFA T-shirt.
Dreamflower

----- Original Message -----
From: "Kathy" <inkling-tcbs@sbcglobal.net>
To: <MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Sunday, December 11, 2005 1:00 AM
Subject: [MEFAwards] Re: web hosting


> I'd be willing to contribute to this.
>
> Kathy (Inkling)
>
> --- In MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com, "Marta" <melayton@g...> wrote:
>>
>> Hey guys,
>>
>> After re-reading this post it occurred to me that maybe I wasn't
> clear
>> on one crucial thing: I talked to Ainae about this several weeks
> ago,
>> and she said she doesn't have a problem with us moving the website
> to
>> a professional server, if we decide we want to do that.
>>
>> Marta
>>
>> --- In MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com, Marta Layton <melayton@g...>
> wrote:
>> >
>> > Hey guys,
>> >
>> > I think we're reaching agreement on a lot of the categories
> issues.
>> > There's still some stuff to nail down, and I don't want to just
> forget
>> > about the remaining things we're still discussing. But I think
> things
>> > are slowing down enough that we can start looking at the next
> topic,
>> > which I think (hope!) won't be as controversial.
>> >
>> > The way it works now, our website is run from a computer at
>> > Ainaechoiriel's house.
>> >
>> > The obvious advantage of this set-up is that it's free to the
> MEFAs; no
>> > one has to pay for the website, and I think everyone agrees that
> it's
>> > much easier to do things through the website instead of through
> the
>> > Yahoo group like we did in 2004.
>> >
>> > The main disadvantage is down time. If anything should happen to
>> > Ainae's computer or the internet connection, the pages that begin
> with
>> > http://gabrielle.sytes.net/ won't load until someone can fix the
>> > problem. Since the site is run off of a computer at Ainae's
> house, the
>> > site may be down until someone can get there and fix the problem.
> (Some
>> > problems can be fixed remotely, by Ainae at work, but not always -
> if,
>> > for example, a cat accidentally turns the computer off, someone
> has to
>> > physically press a button.)
>> >
>> > The problem is that so much of what happens with our website is
>> > time-sensitive. With people in different time-zones and with
> different
>> > schedules, if the site is down for even a few hours near the end
> of
>> > voting season or nominating season, we could have a real problem
> on our
>> > hands. Sure, we can extend those seasons by a day or two like we
> did
>> > this year (2005), but I think the website being down still causes
> a lot
>> > of frustration.
>> >
>> > The only solution that I can think of is to go with a web hosting
>> > company. There would be several advantages:
>> >
>> > 1. It would probably give us more bandwidth. This means that
> pages
>> > would load quicker.
>> >
>> > 2. If the site does go down, the problem could be resolved
> quicker. The
>> > machine would be at a location where there are people to handle
> this
>> > sort of thing, so we wouldn't have to wait for someone to get
> there
>> > like we do now.
>> >
>> > 3. We could get a domain name that's more obvious. Something like
>> > http://www.mefawards.com/ . I think this would make things less
>> > confusing for people new to the awards.
>> >
>> > 4. Right now, Anthony has to email updates to Ainae who installs
> them.
>> > With a professional site Anthony could install them himself.
>> >
>> > The main disadvantage is that someone has to actually *pay* for
> it.
>> > When Anthony, Sulriel, and I discussed the possibility of doing
> this,
>> > we found several packages that provided what we needed for around
>> > $10/mo. The exact cost varied from company to company, of course,
> but I
>> > think we could do this for about $150/year. We could raise that
> if ten
>> > people would each donate $15 to cover the cost of a year's
> hosting. I
>> > don't think that's too much of a burden for most people, when you
>> > consider how much we use the website over the course of the year.
>> >
>> > So what do you guys think? Is this something people are
> interested in
>> > doing? Are people willing to chip in to help cover the costs? I
> think
>> > this would really help the MEFAs, but I can't cover the whole
> cost
>> > myself. If there are enough people interested in making this
> happen we
>> > can start discussing specifics.
>> >
>> > Oh, and I want to make one thing perfectly clear: If for whatever
>> > reason you really can't afford to help out financially, that's
> okay. I
>> > don't know everyone's financial situation (and don't need to),
> and I
>> > want everyone to feel free to participate in whatever way they
> can.
>> > Giving the MEFAs your time (as a volunteer or just by reading
> stories)
>> > is contributing, too.
>> >
>> > Marta
>> >
>>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> Yahoo! Groups Links
>
>
>
>
>
>
>

Msg# 6475

Re: Digest Number 584 Posted by Marta Layton December 12, 2005 - 6:35:42 Topic ID# 6471
> Message: 4
> Date: Sun, 11 Dec 2005 13:53:48 -0000
> From: "sulriel" <Sulriel@htcomp.net>
> Subject: Re: Digest Number 584
>
>
> count me in.
>

Thanks for letting me know.

> have you set up a paypal account? or how will you collect funds?
>

This is the first time I've done anything like this, so I wasn't sure
how exactly to collect the funds. I can set up a paypal account, unless
someone has a different idea.

Marta

Msg# 6476

Re: New file uploaded to MEFAwards Posted by Marta Layton December 12, 2005 - 6:41:33 Topic ID# 1
> Message: 5
> Date: Sun, 11 Dec 2005 16:33:21 -0000
> From: "rhapsody_the_bard" <rhapsody74@gmail.com>
> Subject: Re: New file uploaded to MEFAwards
>
> --- In MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com, Marta Layton <melayton@g...> wrote:
>
>> Thanks for the clarification. I'm the first to admit that I'm no
>> master of the Silm; I've only read it once. What you're saying
>> sounds vaguely familiar from that one read. And as you know more
>> about this than I do, I'd probably trust you anyway. ;-)
>>
> Well you know... actually I was going trough ROTK yesterday, the
> appendices and this is what the appendices says (no actual dates, but
> you can see that the First Age didn't end with Morgoth's capture and
> throwing him behind the Doors of the night):
>
> APPENDIX B
> THE TALE OF YEARS
> (CHRONOLOGY OF THE WESTLANDS)
> The First Age ended with the Great Battle, in which the Host of
> Valinor broke Thangorodrim and overthrew Morgoth. Then most of the
> Noldor returned into the Far West and dwelt in Eressëa within sight
> of Valinor; and many of the Sindar went over Sea also.
>
> The Second Age ended with the first overthrow of Sauron, servant of
> Morgoth. and the taking of the One Ring.
> The Third Age came to its end in the War of the Ring; but the Fourth
> Age was not held to have begun until Master Elrond departed, and the
> time was come for the dominion of Men and the decline of all other
> 'speaking-peoples' in Middle-earth.
> In the Fourth Age the earlier ages were often called the Elder Days;
> but that name was properly given only to the days before the casting
> out of Morgoth. The histories of that time are not recorded here.
>
>
> So this is a pretty good reference by the professor himself :)
>
> Rhapsody
>
>

It is! Thanks, I'd forgotten that that quote was in the appendices.

For the record, I never thought that the First Age ended with the
*first* capture of Morgoth (when he was taken back to Valinor and
originally released, at which point he killed Finwe). I gather from an
earlier post you thought I was confusing the two? I just forgot about
the stuff after the great battle referred to here but still in the
First Age -- all the stuff with Maedhros and Maglor stealing back the
silmarils.

I do think most people who write this stuff will know when their story
is set, in the First Age or Second Age. So I won't try to tell them.
:-)

Marta

Msg# 6477

Re: web hosting Posted by Marta Layton December 12, 2005 - 6:42:14 Topic ID# 6466
> Message: 6
> Date: Sun, 11 Dec 2005 12:56:26 -0600
> From: <aelfwina@cableone.net>
> Subject: Re: Re: web hosting
>
> I wouldn't mind making a small contribution.

Thanks.

> I've also an idea of how the
> MEFAs could raise funds to maintain things in the future. How about a
> Cafe
> Press shop? I know I'd definitely spring for a MEFA T-shirt.

I'm not at all against this, but I'm also not going to be able to
design any of the stuff myself. I just don't have the artistic talent.
(Note that I didn't design a single award banner this year.) If other
people are willing to design some stuff, I have no problem selling. In
fact, I think it's a great idea and would probably buy a shirt myself.

Marta

Msg# 6478

Re: web hosting Posted by rhapsody\_the\_bard December 13, 2005 - 3:34:53 Topic ID# 6466
--- In MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com, Marta Layton <melayton@g...> wrote:
>
> > Message: 6
> > Date: Sun, 11 Dec 2005 12:56:26 -0600
> > From: <aelfwina@c...>
> > Subject: Re: Re: web hosting
> >
> > I wouldn't mind making a small contribution.
>
> Thanks.
>
> > I've also an idea of how the
> > MEFAs could raise funds to maintain things in the future. How
> > about a Cafe Press shop? I know I'd definitely spring for a MEFA
> > T-shirt.
>
> I'm not at all against this, but I'm also not going to be able to
> design any of the stuff myself. I just don't have the artistic
> talent.
> (Note that I didn't design a single award banner this year.) If
> other people are willing to design some stuff, I have no problem
> selling. In fact, I think it's a great idea and would probably buy a
> shirt myself.

Well how about for the MEFA staff: I survived MEFA 2004:
categorisering no more! ;)

I think, if you want this, that there is an artist around who can
design a lovely MEFA logo. You can either make t-shirts with short &
funny sentences and such ;)

Rhapsody

Msg# 6479

Re: web hosting Posted by Marta Layton December 14, 2005 - 6:26:42 Topic ID# 6466
> Message: 1
> Date: Tue, 13 Dec 2005 09:34:44 -0000
> From: "rhapsody_the_bard" <rhapsody74@gmail.com>
> Subject: Re: web hosting
>
> --- In MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com, Marta Layton <melayton@g...> wrote:
>>
>>> Message: 6
>>> Date: Sun, 11 Dec 2005 12:56:26 -0600
>>> From: <aelfwina@c...>
>>> Subject: Re: Re: web hosting
>>>
>>> I wouldn't mind making a small contribution.
>>
>> Thanks.
>>
>>> I've also an idea of how the
>>> MEFAs could raise funds to maintain things in the future. How
>>> about a Cafe Press shop? I know I'd definitely spring for a MEFA
>>> T-shirt.
>>
>> I'm not at all against this, but I'm also not going to be able to
>> design any of the stuff myself. I just don't have the artistic
>> talent.
>> (Note that I didn't design a single award banner this year.) If
>> other people are willing to design some stuff, I have no problem
>> selling. In fact, I think it's a great idea and would probably buy a
>> shirt myself.
>
> Well how about for the MEFA staff: I survived MEFA 2004:
> categorisering no more! ;)
>
>

How does CafePress work? Can you just provide some text and a
description, or do you have to make a graphic of what the front and
back should look like? If it's the latter, then people who have an idea
will still have to come up with the graphic file with the layout. Which
I don't think would be that hard, for you people who are more
artistically inclined.

> I think, if you want this, that there is an artist around who can
> design a lovely MEFA logo. You can either make t-shirts with short &
> funny sentences and such ;)
>

I'd love to have a logo made. I think it would be nice to have a logo
to display at other places besides on t-shirts, like on the website.

As for funny sentences, I think this is a great idea. I'd actually say
that t-shirts should be primarily text, unless the artwork's original.
I'm concerned about copyright infringements, and I don't want to get in
trouble with New Line or anyone else for making a profit off their
work.

Marta

Msg# 6480

where are we? Posted by Marta Layton December 14, 2005 - 6:35:26 Topic ID# 6480
Hey guys,

I'm afraid that I may have killed the discussion on categories by
posting about the new website. I don't want to do that, if there's
still stuff we're not in agreement on.

I posted a run-down on one way we could use labels like book-canon,
movie-verse, and AU for the purpose of these awards.

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/MEFAwards/message/6462

How do you guys feel about this? My main concern isn't that they're
factually right (because we don't need to settle the debate once and
for all of "just what *is* canon), but whether they'll serve our
purposes for this awards. Basically, can they describe the stories that
are likely to be nominated?

Also, I think we've pretty well nailed down the categories for the
Books/Time division. To recap, those are:

1. First Age and Earlier
2. Second Age
3. Early Third Age
4. Late Third Age
5. The Great Years
6. Fourth Age and Beyond
7. Multi-Age

Now we need some awards names for these categories. What should we call
the first, second, and third place awards?

Oh, and I'll set up a paypal account tonight. Now I need to finish
getting dressed and scurry off to work. I think that's about it,
though.

Your thoughts on any of these things greatly appreciated.

Marta

Msg# 6481

pay pal account Posted by Marta Layton December 14, 2005 - 23:39:04 Topic ID# 6481
Hey guys,

I've created the pay pal account as promised and posted about it at the
LJ community.

http://www.livejournal.com/community/mefas/3605.html

Check it out, if you're interested.

Marta
*****
"Our greatest fear is not that we are inadequate. Our greatest fear is
that we are powerful beyond measure. It is our light, not our darkness
that most frightens us. [...] As we let our own light shine, we
unconsciously give other people permission to do the same."

(Nelson Mandela)

Msg# 6482

Re: pay pal account Posted by Kathy December 15, 2005 - 1:00:51 Topic ID# 6481
Hi Marta,

So when would this all start? Are you still researching the web
hosts? Do you want donations now, or should people wait until the Web
site actually moves?

Kathy

--- In MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com, Marta Layton <melayton@g...> wrote:
>
> Hey guys,
>
> I've created the pay pal account as promised and posted about it at
the
> LJ community.
>
> http://www.livejournal.com/community/mefas/3605.html
>
> Check it out, if you're interested.
>
> Marta
> *****
> "Our greatest fear is not that we are inadequate. Our greatest fear
is
> that we are powerful beyond measure. It is our light, not our
darkness
> that most frightens us. [...] As we let our own light shine, we
> unconsciously give other people permission to do the same."
>
> (Nelson Mandela)
>

Msg# 6483

Re: where are we? Posted by Kathy December 15, 2005 - 1:07:46 Topic ID# 6480
Marta,

Didn't we decide that the name of the division was changing from
Books/Time to simply Time, since the categories are now all time-
related?

As to the book/movieverse/canon questions, I have no strong opinion
on them so have just been staying out of those discussions...

Kathy

--- In MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com, Marta Layton <melayton@g...> wrote:
>
> Hey guys,
>
> I'm afraid that I may have killed the discussion on categories by
> posting about the new website. I don't want to do that, if there's
> still stuff we're not in agreement on.
>
> I posted a run-down on one way we could use labels like book-canon,
> movie-verse, and AU for the purpose of these awards.
>
> http://groups.yahoo.com/group/MEFAwards/message/6462
>
> How do you guys feel about this? My main concern isn't that they're
> factually right (because we don't need to settle the debate once
and
> for all of "just what *is* canon), but whether they'll serve our
> purposes for this awards. Basically, can they describe the stories
that
> are likely to be nominated?
>
> Also, I think we've pretty well nailed down the categories for the
> Books/Time division. To recap, those are:
>
> 1. First Age and Earlier
> 2. Second Age
> 3. Early Third Age
> 4. Late Third Age
> 5. The Great Years
> 6. Fourth Age and Beyond
> 7. Multi-Age
>
> Now we need some awards names for these categories. What should we
call
> the first, second, and third place awards?
>
> Oh, and I'll set up a paypal account tonight. Now I need to finish
> getting dressed and scurry off to work. I think that's about it,
> though.
>
> Your thoughts on any of these things greatly appreciated.
>
> Marta
>

Msg# 6484

Re: where are we? Posted by Marta Layton December 15, 2005 - 6:31:26 Topic ID# 6480
> Message: 5
> Date: Thu, 15 Dec 2005 07:06:12 -0000
> From: "Kathy" <inkling-tcbs@sbcglobal.net>
> Subject: Re: where are we?
>
> Marta,
>
> Didn't we decide that the name of the division was changing from
> Books/Time to simply Time, since the categories are now all time-
> related?
>

Yep, we did decide that! Thanks for reminding me.

> As to the book/movieverse/canon questions, I have no strong opinion
> on them so have just been staying out of those discussions...
>

That's good to know. If no one has any strong opinions to the contrary,
I'm more than happy to go with what I have. I just don't want other
people to feel like they're being shut out, if they do have a strong
opinion.

Marta

Msg# 6485

Re: pay pal account Posted by Marta Layton December 15, 2005 - 6:36:19 Topic ID# 6481
> Message: 4
> Date: Thu, 15 Dec 2005 07:00:08 -0000
> From: "Kathy" <inkling-tcbs@sbcglobal.net>
> Subject: Re: pay pal account
>
> Hi Marta,
>
> So when would this all start? Are you still researching the web
> hosts? Do you want donations now, or should people wait until the Web
> site actually moves?
>
> Kathy
>

We actually have a prospective plan in mind. ait's with a company
called Aplus.net , which Sulriel has worked with in the past.
Specifcally, we're looking at the SoloXR plan.

http://hosting.aplus.net/soloxr.html

As for donations, please go ahead and do that if you're planning on it.
We can't move the website until we can pay the company.

Thanks,
Marta

Msg# 6486

'Times' awards names Posted by Marta Layton December 16, 2005 - 0:05:13 Topic ID# 6486
Here's my suggestions for Times awards names

1. First Age and Earlier

1st: The Manwe Award
2nd: The Ulmo Award
3rd: The Aule Award

(the three most important Valar)

*or*

1st: The Earendil Award
2nd: The Maedhros Award
3rd: The Maglor Award

(the 'owners' of the silmarils at the end of the first age)

2. Second Age:

1st: The Númenor Award
2nd: The Eregion Award
3rd: The Khazad-dûm Award

(the three regions that seem to see the most Second Age stories)

3. Early Third Age:

1st: The Elendil Award
2nd: The Isildur Award
3rd: The Éorl Award

(the founders of the three kingdoms of Men founded in the early third
age - Arnor, Gondor, Rohan)

4. Late Third Age:

1st: The Fell Winter Award
2nd: The Quest for Erebor Award
3rd: The Bilbo's Party Award

(three major events of this time period)

*or*

1st: The Boromir and Faramir Award
2nd: The Eomer and Eowyn Award
3rd: The Little Legolas Award

(characters that often have stories about their childhood)

5. Great Years:

1st: The Halbarad Award
2nd: The Háma Award
3rd: The Dáin Award

(three characters who died in the War of the Ring, yet are often
forgotten)

6. The Fourth Age and Beyond:

1st: The Annúminas Award
2nd: The Emyn Arnen Award (or: The Ithilien Award)
3rd: The Undertowers Award

(three places built or re-built in the Fourth Age)

7. Multi-Age:

1st: The Celeborn Award
2nd: The Treebeard Award
3rd: The Durin Award

(characters who seem to transcend the different ages of Middle-earth
and appear in more than one age)

*or*

1st: The Andúril Award
2nd: The Orcrist and Glamdring Award
3rd: The Sting Award

(swords in the Ring War from earlier ages)

Feel free to suggest your own, or changes to these!

Marta

Msg# 6487

Re: 'Times' awards names Posted by Kathy December 16, 2005 - 0:56:31 Topic ID# 6486
All good ideas, though Maedhros and Maglor might be a bit of a
downer, given their fates.

Here's another idea for First Age:

1st: The Vanyar Award
2nd: The Noldor Award
3rd: The Teleri Award

Kathy (Inkling)

--- In MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com, Marta Layton <melayton@g...> wrote:
>
> Here's my suggestions for Times awards names
>
> 1. First Age and Earlier
>
> 1st: The Manwe Award
> 2nd: The Ulmo Award
> 3rd: The Aule Award
>
> (the three most important Valar)
>
> *or*
>
> 1st: The Earendil Award
> 2nd: The Maedhros Award
> 3rd: The Maglor Award
>
> (the 'owners' of the silmarils at the end of the first age)
>
> 2. Second Age:
>
> 1st: The Númenor Award
> 2nd: The Eregion Award
> 3rd: The Khazad-dûm Award
>
> (the three regions that seem to see the most Second Age stories)
>
> 3. Early Third Age:
>
> 1st: The Elendil Award
> 2nd: The Isildur Award
> 3rd: The Éorl Award
>
> (the founders of the three kingdoms of Men founded in the early
third
> age - Arnor, Gondor, Rohan)
>
> 4. Late Third Age:
>
> 1st: The Fell Winter Award
> 2nd: The Quest for Erebor Award
> 3rd: The Bilbo's Party Award
>
> (three major events of this time period)
>
> *or*
>
> 1st: The Boromir and Faramir Award
> 2nd: The Eomer and Eowyn Award
> 3rd: The Little Legolas Award
>
> (characters that often have stories about their childhood)
>
> 5. Great Years:
>
> 1st: The Halbarad Award
> 2nd: The Háma Award
> 3rd: The Dáin Award
>
> (three characters who died in the War of the Ring, yet are often
> forgotten)
>
> 6. The Fourth Age and Beyond:
>
> 1st: The Annúminas Award
> 2nd: The Emyn Arnen Award (or: The Ithilien Award)
> 3rd: The Undertowers Award
>
> (three places built or re-built in the Fourth Age)
>
> 7. Multi-Age:
>
> 1st: The Celeborn Award
> 2nd: The Treebeard Award
> 3rd: The Durin Award
>
> (characters who seem to transcend the different ages of Middle-
earth
> and appear in more than one age)
>
> *or*
>
> 1st: The Andúril Award
> 2nd: The Orcrist and Glamdring Award
> 3rd: The Sting Award
>
> (swords in the Ring War from earlier ages)
>
> Feel free to suggest your own, or changes to these!
>
> Marta
>

Msg# 6488

Re: 'Times' awards names Posted by MarigoldCotton@aol.com December 16, 2005 - 1:04:25 Topic ID# 6486
>4. Late Third Age:

1st: The Fell Winter Award
2nd: The Quest for Erebor Award
3rd: The Bilbo's Party Award

For 3rd what about: The Party of Special Magnificence Award

because although we know which party you are referring to, technically Bilbo had lots of parties and you mean this specific one...

Marigold

>Here's my suggestions for Times awards names
>
>1. First Age and Earlier
>
>1st: The Manwe Award
>2nd: The Ulmo Award
>3rd: The Aule Award
>
>(the three most important Valar)
>
>*or*
>
>1st: The Earendil Award
>2nd: The Maedhros Award
>3rd: The Maglor Award
>
>(the 'owners' of the silmarils at the end of the first age)
>
>2. Second Age:
>
>1st: The Númenor Award
>2nd: The Eregion Award
>3rd: The Khazad-dûm Award
>
>(the three regions that seem to see the most Second Age stories)
>
>3. Early Third Age:
>
>1st: The Elendil Award
>2nd: The Isildur Award
>3rd: The Éorl Award
>
>(the founders of the three kingdoms of Men founded in the early third
>age - Arnor, Gondor, Rohan)
>
>4. Late Third Age:
>
>1st: The Fell Winter Award
>2nd: The Quest for Erebor Award
>3rd: The Bilbo's Party Award
>
>(three major events of this time period)
>
>*or*
>
>1st: The Boromir and Faramir Award
>2nd: The Eomer and Eowyn Award
>3rd: The Little Legolas Award
>
>(characters that often have stories about their childhood)
>
>5. Great Years:
>
>1st: The Halbarad Award
>2nd: The Háma Award
>3rd: The Dáin Award
>
>(three characters who died in the War of the Ring, yet are often
>forgotten)
>
>6. The Fourth Age and Beyond:
>
>1st: The Annúminas Award
>2nd: The Emyn Arnen Award  (or: The Ithilien Award)
>3rd: The Undertowers Award
>
>(three places built or re-built in the Fourth Age)
>
>7. Multi-Age:
>
>1st: The Celeborn Award
>2nd: The Treebeard Award
>3rd: The Durin Award
>
>(characters who seem to transcend the different ages of Middle-earth
>and appear in more than one age)
>
>*or*
>
>1st: The Andúril Award
>2nd: The Orcrist and Glamdring Award
>3rd: The Sting Award
>
>(swords in the Ring War from earlier ages)
>
>Feel free to suggest your own, or changes to these!
>
>Marta
>
>
>
>
>Yahoo! Groups Links
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>


--
Marigold's Red Book
http://marigold.tolkienshire.com

Marigold's Recommendations Page
http://www.geocities.com/marigoldsrecommendations/

Marigold's Live Journal
http://www.livejournal.com/users/marigoldg/

Tales of The Red Book
http://www.livejournal.com/users/talesofredbook/




There, peeping among the cloud-wrack above a dark tor high up in the mountains, Sam saw a white star twinkle for a while. The beauty of it smote his heart, as he looked up out of the forsaken land, and hope returned to him. For like a shaft, clear and cold, the thought pierced him that in the end the Shadow was only a small and passing thing: there was light and high beauty forever beyond its reach.
>
>Sam, in Mordor, RoTK

Msg# 6489

Re: 'Times' awards names Posted by Kathy December 16, 2005 - 1:13:19 Topic ID# 6486
Or, how about The Long-expected Party Award?

Kathy

--- In MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com, MarigoldCotton@a... wrote:
>
> >4. Late Third Age:
>
> 1st: The Fell Winter Award
> 2nd: The Quest for Erebor Award
> 3rd: The Bilbo's Party Award
>
> For 3rd what about: The Party of Special Magnificence Award
>
> because although we know which party you are referring to,
technically Bilbo had lots of parties and you mean this specific
one...
>
> Marigold
>
> >Here's my suggestions for Times awards names
> >
> >1. First Age and Earlier
> >
> >1st: The Manwe Award
> >2nd: The Ulmo Award
> >3rd: The Aule Award
> >
> >(the three most important Valar)
> >
> >*or*
> >
> >1st: The Earendil Award
> >2nd: The Maedhros Award
> >3rd: The Maglor Award
> >
> >(the 'owners' of the silmarils at the end of the first age)
> >
> >2. Second Age:
> >
> >1st: The Númenor Award
> >2nd: The Eregion Award
> >3rd: The Khazad-dûm Award
> >
> >(the three regions that seem to see the most Second Age stories)
> >
> >3. Early Third Age:
> >
> >1st: The Elendil Award
> >2nd: The Isildur Award
> >3rd: The Éorl Award
> >
> >(the founders of the three kingdoms of Men founded in the early
third
> >age - Arnor, Gondor, Rohan)
> >
> >4. Late Third Age:
> >
> >1st: The Fell Winter Award
> >2nd: The Quest for Erebor Award
> >3rd: The Bilbo's Party Award
> >
> >(three major events of this time period)
> >
> >*or*
> >
> >1st: The Boromir and Faramir Award
> >2nd: The Eomer and Eowyn Award
> >3rd: The Little Legolas Award
> >
> >(characters that often have stories about their childhood)
> >
> >5. Great Years:
> >
> >1st: The Halbarad Award
> >2nd: The Háma Award
> >3rd: The Dáin Award
> >
> >(three characters who died in the War of the Ring, yet are often
> >forgotten)
> >
> >6. The Fourth Age and Beyond:
> >
> >1st: The Annúminas Award
> >2nd: The Emyn Arnen Award  (or: The Ithilien Award)
> >3rd: The Undertowers Award
> >
> >(three places built or re-built in the Fourth Age)
> >
> >7. Multi-Age:
> >
> >1st: The Celeborn Award
> >2nd: The Treebeard Award
> >3rd: The Durin Award
> >
> >(characters who seem to transcend the different ages of Middle-
earth
> >and appear in more than one age)
> >
> >*or*
> >
> >1st: The Andúril Award
> >2nd: The Orcrist and Glamdring Award
> >3rd: The Sting Award
> >
> >(swords in the Ring War from earlier ages)
> >
> >Feel free to suggest your own, or changes to these!
> >
> >Marta
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >Yahoo! Groups Links
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
>
>
> --
> Marigold's Red Book
> http://marigold.tolkienshire.com
>
> Marigold's Recommendations Page
> http://www.geocities.com/marigoldsrecommendations/
>
> Marigold's Live Journal
> http://www.livejournal.com/users/marigoldg/
>
> Tales of The Red Book
> http://www.livejournal.com/users/talesofredbook/
>
>
>
>
> There, peeping among the cloud-wrack above a dark tor high up in
the mountains, Sam saw a white star twinkle for a while. The beauty
of it smote his heart, as he looked up out of the forsaken land, and
hope returned to him. For like a shaft, clear and cold, the thought
pierced him that in the end the Shadow was only a small and passing
thing: there was light and high beauty forever beyond its reach.
> >
> >Sam, in Mordor, RoTK
>

Msg# 6490

Re: 'Times' awards names Posted by MarigoldCotton@aol.com December 16, 2005 - 1:20:01 Topic ID# 6486
>Or, how about The Long-expected Party Award?
>
>Kathy

I like that too : )

Marigold
>
>--- In MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com, MarigoldCotton@a... wrote:
>>
>> >4. Late Third Age:
>>
>> 1st: The Fell Winter Award
>> 2nd: The Quest for Erebor Award
>> 3rd: The Bilbo's Party Award
>>
>> For 3rd what about: The Party of Special Magnificence Award
>>
>> because although we know which party you are referring to,
>technically Bilbo had lots of parties and you mean this specific
>one...
>>
>> Marigold
>>
>> >Here's my suggestions for Times awards names
>> >
>> >1. First Age and Earlier
>> >
>> >1st: The Manwe Award
>> >2nd: The Ulmo Award
>> >3rd: The Aule Award
>> >
>> >(the three most important Valar)
>> >
>> >*or*
>> >
>> >1st: The Earendil Award
>> >2nd: The Maedhros Award
>> >3rd: The Maglor Award
>> >
>> >(the 'owners' of the silmarils at the end of the first age)
>> >
>> >2. Second Age:
>> >
>> >1st: The Númenor Award
>> >2nd: The Eregion Award
>> >3rd: The Khazad-dûm Award
>> >
>> >(the three regions that seem to see the most Second Age stories)
>> >
>> >3. Early Third Age:
>> >
>> >1st: The Elendil Award
>> >2nd: The Isildur Award
>> >3rd: The Éorl Award
>> >
>> >(the founders of the three kingdoms of Men founded in the early
>third
>> >age - Arnor, Gondor, Rohan)
>> >
>> >4. Late Third Age:
>> >
>> >1st: The Fell Winter Award
>> >2nd: The Quest for Erebor Award
>> >3rd: The Bilbo's Party Award
>> >
>> >(three major events of this time period)
>> >
>> >*or*
>> >
>> >1st: The Boromir and Faramir Award
>> >2nd: The Eomer and Eowyn Award
>> >3rd: The Little Legolas Award
>> >
>> >(characters that often have stories about their childhood)
>> >
>> >5. Great Years:
>> >
>> >1st: The Halbarad Award
>> >2nd: The Háma Award
>> >3rd: The Dáin Award
>> >
>> >(three characters who died in the War of the Ring, yet are often
>> >forgotten)
>> >
>> >6. The Fourth Age and Beyond:
>> >
>> >1st: The Annúminas Award
>> >2nd: The Emyn Arnen Award  (or: The Ithilien Award)
>> >3rd: The Undertowers Award
>> >
>> >(three places built or re-built in the Fourth Age)
>> >
>> >7. Multi-Age:
>> >
>> >1st: The Celeborn Award
>> >2nd: The Treebeard Award
>> >3rd: The Durin Award
>> >
>> >(characters who seem to transcend the different ages of Middle-
>earth
>> >and appear in more than one age)
>> >
>> >*or*
>> >
>> >1st: The Andúril Award
>> >2nd: The Orcrist and Glamdring Award
>> >3rd: The Sting Award
>> >
>> >(swords in the Ring War from earlier ages)
>> >
>> >Feel free to suggest your own, or changes to these!
>> >
>> >Marta
>> >
>> >
>> >
>> >
>> >Yahoo! Groups Links
>> >
>> >
>> >
>> >
>> >
>> >
>> >
>> >
>>
>>
>> --
>> Marigold's Red Book
>> http://marigold.tolkienshire.com
>>
>> Marigold's Recommendations Page
>> http://www.geocities.com/marigoldsrecommendations/
>>
>> Marigold's Live Journal
>> http://www.livejournal.com/users/marigoldg/
>>
>> Tales of The Red Book
>> http://www.livejournal.com/users/talesofredbook/
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> There, peeping among the cloud-wrack above a dark tor high up in
>the mountains, Sam saw a white star twinkle for a while. The beauty
>of it smote his heart, as he looked up out of the forsaken land, and
>hope returned to him. For like a shaft, clear and cold, the thought
>pierced him that in the end the Shadow was only a small and passing
>thing: there was light and high beauty forever beyond its reach.
>> >
>> >Sam, in Mordor, RoTK
>>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>Yahoo! Groups Links
>
>
>
>
>
>
>


--
Marigold's Red Book
http://marigold.tolkienshire.com

Marigold's Recommendations Page
http://www.geocities.com/marigoldsrecommendations/

Marigold's Live Journal
http://www.livejournal.com/users/marigoldg/

Tales of The Red Book
http://www.livejournal.com/users/talesofredbook/




There, peeping among the cloud-wrack above a dark tor high up in the mountains, Sam saw a white star twinkle for a while. The beauty of it smote his heart, as he looked up out of the forsaken land, and hope returned to him. For like a shaft, clear and cold, the thought pierced him that in the end the Shadow was only a small and passing thing: there was light and high beauty forever beyond its reach.
>
>Sam, in Mordor, RoTK

Msg# 6491

Re: 'Times' awards names Posted by rhapsody\_the\_bard December 16, 2005 - 1:34:34 Topic ID# 6486
--- In MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com, "Kathy" <inkling-tcbs@s...> wrote:
>
> All good ideas, though Maedhros and Maglor might be a bit of a
> downer, given their fates.

Maglor is the living testimony of what happened to the Noldor and
elves on Beleriand during the first age. The Noldolante that he
composed is the full embodiment of that. So I actually rather see him
at the nr one spot (that shouldn't surprise anyone ;) ). I think it
would be nice to see Maglor on nr one, the Hurin award (the edain
during the First Age) on nr 2 and Earendil or Tuor award (mixed ftes,
from men becoming an elf) on nr 3.

> Here's another idea for First Age:
>
> 1st: The Vanyar Award
> 2nd: The Noldor Award
> 3rd: The Teleri Award

Too focussed on the Elves (although I love them a lot), but it shuts
out what happened to the race of men during the first age. The tale of
Hurin... Turin Turambar are important pieces/events during the first
age as well.

The rest looks fine Marta :)

Rhapsody

Msg# 6492

Re: 'Times' awards names Posted by Liz December 16, 2005 - 8:51:42 Topic ID# 6486
Hi Marta

Thanks for starting us off with a list of suggestions - always a
difficult task. I think there are some great ideas here. But (being
me) I'm going to put my canon-geek hat on and quibble with some of
them. I'm not necessarily saying we shouldn't use your suggestions,
just that we should maybe be aware of the canonical issues involved. :-D

I've snipped a couple of awards where I have no comments.

> 1. First Age and Earlier
>
> 1st: The Manwe Award
> 2nd: The Ulmo Award
> 3rd: The Aule Award
>
> (the three most important Valar)

Uh, the three most important "male" Valar.... Why no "female" Valar? ;-)

To quote the Valaquenta: "Among them Nine were of chief power and
reverence; but one is removed from their number, and Eight remain, the
Aratar, the High Ones of Arda: Manwë and Varda, Ulmo, Yavanna and
Aulë, Mandos, Nienna, and Oromë."

It's hard to pick just three from eight, but I would suggest having
Yavanna in there, since she created the Trees.

> *or*
>
> 1st: The Earendil Award
> 2nd: The Maedhros Award
> 3rd: The Maglor Award
>
> (the 'owners' of the silmarils at the end of the first age)

IMHO, the First Age and Earlier is about more than just the Silmarils,
and seems to me to be very strongly influenced by the Valar (whereas
they step back from events much more at the end of the First Age). So
I'd rather go for the first suggestion, with the Valar, here.

> 3. Early Third Age:
>
> 1st: The Elendil Award
> 2nd: The Isildur Award
> 3rd: The Éorl Award
>
> (the founders of the three kingdoms of Men founded in the early third
> age - Arnor, Gondor, Rohan)

A few issues here. ;-)

While I can see from our definition of Early Third Age that the
foundation of Rohan falls into this timeframe, it's some 2500 years
later than the other two and that just seems "odd" to me.(I guess I
don't divide the Third Age up that way in my mind.)

Also, technically speaking, Arnor and Gondor were founded in the
Second Age. And poor Anarion (who co-founded Gondor) doesn't get a
look in here.... ;-)

And this also seems very Man-centric to me.

I'm struggling to think of an alternative, but maybe something like

1. The Valandil and Meneldil Awards (Isildur and Anarion's sons and
the first two kings of Arnor and Gondor who ruled wholly in the Third Age)
2. The Thráin I award (first King Under the Mountain)
3. The Eorl Award (first King of Rohan) (and btw, Eorl does not have
an accent over it... confusing, I know.)

I know that leaves the Elves out, but there weren't any Elven realms
founded in this period. And this gives a slightly better spread of
events throughout the early Third age.

(Oh, and you may want a different order.)

Anyway, feel free to rubbish my suggestions!

> 4. Late Third Age:
>
> 1st: The Fell Winter Award
> 2nd: The Quest for Erebor Award
> 3rd: The Bilbo's Party Award
>
> (three major events of this time period)

I like the suggestion of renaming the Bilbo's Party Award that's been
made. But all these seem a little Hobbit-centred. (And I initially
thought the Fell Winter = the Long Winter, when Helm died - which is
my bad!)

> *or*
>
> 1st: The Boromir and Faramir Award
> 2nd: The Eomer and Eowyn Award
> 3rd: The Little Legolas Award
>
> (characters that often have stories about their childhood)

And this seems not Hobbity enough to me! Besides, I would think Little
Legolas stories would be pre 2850. (I know we don't know exactly how
old he is, but his comment in Fangorn suggests he personally doesn't
see 500 years as a very long time, while he calls both Gimli, who is
around 140, and Aragorn who is nearly 90, "children"!)

Could we maybe go with the something along the lines of the first
suggestion, but find a better mix of other events instead of the Fell
Winter? Some suggestions, which I admit might be a bit obscure for
most people, are:
* The Battle of Poros Award (involved both Gondor and Rohan and saw
the death of the King of Rohan's twin sons - 2885)
* The Henneth Annun award (it was built 2901)
* The Battle of the Five Armies Award (which overlaps the Quest of
Erebor, of course, but maybe suggests a wider racial spread)
* The Mount Doom Awakes Award (er, maybe not the best name! 2954)

> 6. The Fourth Age and Beyond:
>
> 1st: The Annúminas Award
> 2nd: The Emyn Arnen Award (or: The Ithilien Award)
> 3rd: The Undertowers Award
>
> (three places built or re-built in the Fourth Age)

I'd prefer Emyn Arnen as it's more "specific" and in line with the
other two.

> 7. Multi-Age:
>
> 1st: The Celeborn Award
> 2nd: The Treebeard Award
> 3rd: The Durin Award
>
> (characters who seem to transcend the different ages of Middle-earth
> and appear in more than one age)

A couple of other suggestions:

* The Tom Bombadil Award (As Elrond says: "But I had forgotten
Bombadil, if indeed this is still the same that walked the woods and
hills long ago, and even then was older than the old. That was not
then his name. Iarwain Ben-adar we called him, oldest and fatherless.
But many another name he has since been given by other folk: Forn by
the Dwarves, Orald by Northern Men, and other names beside.")

* The Glorfindel Award (assuming you buy into the re-embodiment theory)

> *or*
>
> 1st: The Andúril Award
> 2nd: The Orcrist and Glamdring Award
> 3rd: The Sting Award
>
> (swords in the Ring War from earlier ages)

I slightly prefer the "multi-age character" names rather than the
sword names, although I think these are good too.

> Feel free to suggest your own, or changes to these!

HTH

Cheers, Liz

Msg# 6493

Re: 'Times' awards names Posted by aelfwina@cableone.net December 16, 2005 - 11:26:00 Topic ID# 6486
----- Original Message -----
From: "Marta Layton" <melayton@gmail.com>
To: <MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Friday, December 16, 2005 12:10 AM
Subject: [MEFAwards] 'Times' awards names


Here's my suggestions for Times awards names

1. First Age and Earlier

1st: The Manwe Award
2nd: The Ulmo Award
3rd: The Aule Award

(the three most important Valar)

*or*

1st: The Earendil Award
2nd: The Maedhros Award
3rd: The Maglor Award

(the 'owners' of the silmarils at the end of the first age)

::Either of those sounds okay to me.

2. Second Age:

1st: The Númenor Award
2nd: The Eregion Award
3rd: The Khazad-dûm Award

(the three regions that seem to see the most Second Age stories)

::I really like these for the Second Age

3. Early Third Age:

1st: The Elendil Award
2nd: The Isildur Award
3rd: The Éorl Award

(the founders of the three kingdoms of Men founded in the early third
age - Arnor, Gondor, Rohan)

::And I think the suggestion for Early Third Age is perfect.

4. Late Third Age:

1st: The Fell Winter Award
2nd: The Quest for Erebor Award
3rd: The Bilbo's Party Award

(three major events of this time period)

::I agree with a couple of others that
"3rd The Long-Expected Party Award"
would be better

1st: The Boromir and Faramir Award
2nd: The Eomer and Eowyn Award
3rd: The Little Legolas Award

(characters that often have stories about their childhood)

::I really don't care for those; there are just as many stories about Young
Frodo, Little Sam and Merry and Wee Pippin, and there also seem to be a lot
of stories about Little Estel. And Legolas' childhood would not have been
taking place then, anyway, would it? He was most certainly at *least* born
in the Early Third Age if not earlier. Otherwise, what about all his remarks
about feeling young in Fangorn?


5. Great Years:

1st: The Halbarad Award
2nd: The Háma Award
3rd: The Dáin Award

(three characters who died in the War of the Ring, yet are often
forgotten)

::Or how about defining events of the Great Years:
Going in chronological order (which is what you seem to be doing) how about:
1st The Council of Elrond Award
2nd The Sammath Naur Award (or The Cracks of Doom award or The Destruction
of the Ring Award)
3rd The Grey Havens Award


6. The Fourth Age and Beyond:

1st: The Annúminas Award
2nd: The Emyn Arnen Award (or: The Ithilien Award)
3rd: The Undertowers Award

(three places built or re-built in the Fourth Age)

::I think I like these very much. I could go for them--(I think I like
Ithilien better than Emyn Arnen, but could go with either.)


7. Multi-Age:

1st: The Celeborn Award
2nd: The Treebeard Award
3rd: The Durin Award

(characters who seem to transcend the different ages of Middle-earth
and appear in more than one age)

*or*

1st: The Andúril Award
2nd: The Orcrist and Glamdring Award
3rd: The Sting Award

(swords in the Ring War from earlier ages)

::I like both of these lists, though I think I like the second one better.

Dreamflower
(Barbara)

Feel free to suggest your own, or changes to these!

Marta




Yahoo! Groups Links

Msg# 6494

Re: 'Times' awards names Posted by dwimmer\_laik December 16, 2005 - 13:36:30 Topic ID# 6486
--- In MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com, Marta Layton <melayton@g...> wrote:
>
> Here's my suggestions for Times awards names
>
> 1. First Age and Earlier
>
> 1st: The Manwe Award
> 2nd: The Ulmo Award
> 3rd: The Aule Award
>
> (the three most important Valar)

How about:

1. The Lamps of the Valar Award
2. The Light of the Trees Award
3. The Rising of the Sun and Moon Award


That would nicely fit the theme of "Time", and also get in the three
major different ways of calculating time by different sources of light
in the First Age and earlier.

(Plus, I have a feeling these may make for far easier visuals--no
purple Ulmo, for example, and most people can probably find images of
lamps, trees, suns, and moons that could be made into nice banners.)

<snip>
>
> 2. Second Age:
>
> 1st: The Númenor Award
> 2nd: The Eregion Award
> 3rd: The Khazad-dûm Award
>
> (the three regions that seem to see the most Second Age stories)

Like these very much.

> 3. Early Third Age:
>
> 1st: The Elendil Award
> 2nd: The Isildur Award
> 3rd: The Éorl Award

Liz has pointed out that Anarion is absent, plus Arnor and Gondor came
into being in the Second Age.

How about:

1. The Thrones of Osgiliath Award
2. The Founding of the Shire Award
3. The Delving of Erebor Award

Two regions newly founded in the (relatively) early Third Age, plus
the acknowledgment that in Osgiliath, both Isildur and Anarion ruled
as joint-kings.

Or one could use the Eorl and swap out the Osgiliath award for
something like "The Raising of Meduseld", and switch the order around
if desired. Then there would still be three political entities founded
in the early third age.


> 4. Late Third Age:
>
> 1st: The Fell Winter Award
> 2nd: The Quest for Erebor Award
> 3rd: The Bilbo's Party Award
>
> (three major events of this time period)

I definitely think The Quest for Erebor needs to be represented here
in some form. Am not sure about the other two, although I like the
idea of a "Long Expected Party" award.

> *or*
>
> 1st: The Boromir and Faramir Award
> 2nd: The Eomer and Eowyn Award
> 3rd: The Little Legolas Award
>
> (characters that often have stories about their childhood)

There are, I think, far too many characters whose childhoods are
portrayed for us to choose three without being arbitrary about it. I'd
rather events or some artifacts that are significant be used.

> 5. Great Years:
>
> 1st: The Halbarad Award
> 2nd: The Háma Award
> 3rd: The Dáin Award
>
> (three characters who died in the War of the Ring, yet are often
> forgotten)

At the risk of confusing matters, why not use the book titles here?
FOTR, TTT, ROTK. Lots of options for banners, and it just makes sense
if we're thinking of thigns that cover these years.

>
> 6. The Fourth Age and Beyond:
>
> 1st: The Annúminas Award
> 2nd: The Emyn Arnen Award (or: The Ithilien Award)
> 3rd: The Undertowers Award

Like the Emyn Arnen Award better than the Ithilien award. Keeps with
the tower theme.

> (three places built or re-built in the Fourth Age)
>
> 7. Multi-Age:
>
> 1st: The Celeborn Award
> 2nd: The Treebeard Award
> 3rd: The Durin Award
>
> (characters who seem to transcend the different ages of Middle-earth
> and appear in more than one age)

I like Liz's idea of the Tom Bombadil award put in here somewhere. He
is at least instantly recognizable thanks to the hat and boots.


Dwim

Msg# 6495

Re: 'Times' awards names Posted by MarigoldCotton@aol.com December 17, 2005 - 0:56:46 Topic ID# 6486
Dwim said:

1. The Lamps of the Valar Award
2. The Light of the Trees Award
3. The Rising of the Sun and Moon Award

I like these very much, and think that they would also inspire some lovely icons!

Marigold

--
Marigold's Red Book
http://marigold.tolkienshire.com

Marigold's Recommendations Page
http://www.geocities.com/marigoldsrecommendations/

Marigold's Live Journal
http://www.livejournal.com/users/marigoldg/

Tales of The Red Book
http://www.livejournal.com/users/talesofredbook/




There, peeping among the cloud-wrack above a dark tor high up in the mountains, Sam saw a white star twinkle for a while. The beauty of it smote his heart, as he looked up out of the forsaken land, and hope returned to him. For like a shaft, clear and cold, the thought pierced him that in the end the Shadow was only a small and passing thing: there was light and high beauty forever beyond its reach.
>
>Sam, in Mordor, RoTK

Msg# 6496

Re: 'Times' awards names Posted by Liz December 17, 2005 - 4:41:35 Topic ID# 6486
> Dwim said:
>
> 1. The Lamps of the Valar Award
> 2. The Light of the Trees Award
> 3. The Rising of the Sun and Moon Award

Marigold wrote:

> I like these very much, and think that they would also inspire some
lovely icons!

Seconded! I think this is a really good suggestion!

Liz

Msg# 6497

Re: 'Times' awards names Posted by Liz December 17, 2005 - 4:51:21 Topic ID# 6486
Dwim wrote:

> 1. The Thrones of Osgiliath Award
> 2. The Founding of the Shire Award
> 3. The Delving of Erebor Award
>
> Two regions newly founded in the (relatively) early Third Age, plus
> the acknowledgment that in Osgiliath, both Isildur and Anarion ruled
> as joint-kings.
>
> Or one could use the Eorl and swap out the Osgiliath award for
> something like "The Raising of Meduseld", and switch the order around
> if desired. Then there would still be three political entities founded
> in the early third age.

I really like the combination of "The Raising of Meduseld Award", "The
Founding of the Shire Award" and "The Delving of Erebor Award".
They're three events that really did take place in that period, and it
gets over the awkwardness of the fact the Realms in Exile were founded
in the Second Age.

> > 5. Great Years:
> >
> > 1st: The Halbarad Award
> > 2nd: The Háma Award
> > 3rd: The Dáin Award
> >
> > (three characters who died in the War of the Ring, yet are often
> > forgotten)
>
> At the risk of confusing matters, why not use the book titles here?
> FOTR, TTT, ROTK. Lots of options for banners, and it just makes sense
> if we're thinking of thigns that cover these years.

I agree that this makes things simpler. The only slight drawback I see
is that someone could end up with a RotK Award for a story set during
FotR, which would be a bit odd. But probably no odder than, say,
getting The Háma Award for a story about The Scouring of the Shire....

Cheers, Liz

Msg# 6498

Re: 'Times' awards names Posted by dwimmer\_laik December 17, 2005 - 9:20:10 Topic ID# 6486
> >
> > At the risk of confusing matters, why not use the book titles here?
> > FOTR, TTT, ROTK. Lots of options for banners, and it just makes
sense
> > if we're thinking of thigns that cover these years.
>
> I agree that this makes things simpler. The only slight drawback I
see
> is that someone could end up with a RotK Award for a story set during
> FotR, which would be a bit odd. But probably no odder than, say,
> getting The Háma Award for a story about The Scouring of the
Shire....

Exactly. We had some odd ones this year, too, I think. Hazard of the
awards naming enterprise, I think.

Of course, we also had some awards that were frighteningly accurate,
like Adraefan winning the "Boromir Lives!" AU award...

Dwim

Msg# 6499

Re: 'Times' awards names Posted by dwimmer\_laik December 17, 2005 - 11:42:27 Topic ID# 6486
> > 4. Late Third Age:
> >
> > 1st: The Fell Winter Award
> > 2nd: The Quest for Erebor Award
> > 3rd: The Bilbo's Party Award
> >
> > (three major events of this time period)

Had a thought just now about this set of awards, even though it
doesn't include the Quest for Erebor. What if the awards for the Late
Third Age were:

1. The Ruling Ring Award
2. The Three Rings Award
3. The Nine Rings Award

Reasoning: the surviving Rings are what will shape the defining (and
closing) event of the Third Age--the Ring War and the departure of
the Ring-bearers; the Late Third Age is the period when the various
factions begin to move towards that war.

Dwim

Msg# 6500

Re: 'Times' awards names Posted by Marta Layton December 17, 2005 - 12:11:23 Topic ID# 6486
Hey Kathy,

> Message: 4
> Date: Fri, 16 Dec 2005 06:56:09 -0000
> From: "Kathy" <inkling-tcbs@sbcglobal.net>
> Subject: Re: 'Times' awards names
>
> All good ideas, though Maedhros and Maglor might be a bit of a
> downer, given their fates.
>
> Here's another idea for First Age:
>
> 1st: The Vanyar Award
> 2nd: The Noldor Award
> 3rd: The Teleri Award
>
> Kathy (Inkling)
>

This is a good suggestion if we want to identify the groups of Elves -
and it may be something we could consider when looking at names for the
Races awardsd. But, in this case,  I think it would be better if the
award names could encompass the actions of Men, Dwarves and Valar in
this period as well. Personally, I like Dwim's suggestions of the three
types of light in this time period.

Thanks for your input, though. All of these ideas spur my mind in
different directions, so I can see what might work well.

Cheers,
Marta

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Msg# 6501

Re: 'Times' awards names Posted by Marta Layton December 17, 2005 - 12:18:41 Topic ID# 6486
> Message: 5
> Date: Fri, 16 Dec 2005 02:02:05 -0500
> From: MarigoldCotton@aol.com
> Subject: Re: 'Times' awards names
>
>> 4. Late Third Age:
>
> 1st: The Fell Winter Award
> 2nd: The Quest for Erebor Award
> 3rd: The Bilbo's Party Award
>
> For 3rd what about: The Party of Special Magnificence Award
>
> because although we know which party you are referring to, technically
> Bilbo had lots of parties and you mean this specific one...
>

Good point. I think I'm going to go with "The Long-Expected Party
Award" because it's the name of the chapter and I think it would be
more identifiable to people who may not be that familiar with the text
of that chapter. But definitely, "Bilbo's Party" is vague. ;-)

Marta

Msg# 6502

Re: 'Times' awards names Posted by Marta Layton December 17, 2005 - 12:31:51 Topic ID# 6486
> Message: 8
> Date: Fri, 16 Dec 2005 07:33:54 -0000
> From: "rhapsody_the_bard" <rhapsody74@gmail.com>
> Subject: Re: 'Times' awards names
>
> --- In MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com, "Kathy" <inkling-tcbs@s...> wrote:
>>
>> All good ideas, though Maedhros and Maglor might be a bit of a
>> downer, given their fates.
>
> Maglor is the living testimony of what happened to the Noldor and
> elves on Beleriand during the first age. The Noldolante that he
> composed is the full embodiment of that. So I actually rather see him
> at the nr one spot (that shouldn't surprise anyone ;) ). I think it
> would be nice to see Maglor on nr one, the Hurin award (the edain
> during the First Age) on nr 2 and Earendil or Tuor award (mixed ftes,
> from men becoming an elf) on nr 3.
>
>

Well, Maglor is certainly a good spokesperson for the Noldor. You could
argue that someone from the Sindar side of things also deserves a spot
on the list, such as Thingol.

And therein lies the problem. If we try to pick three people to
represent such a diverse age, someone's going to be left out. Then
ranking thm is also a problem. I think if we go with major events we
have a better chance of being more inclusive to all the stories likely
to be portrayed. Not necessarily the three most important, but a unique
set of three events that form a neat little set so there isn't a fourth
event that's getting left out. That's part of why I like Dwim's
suggestion of the three lights so appealing. Will that work for you?

Cheers,
Marta

Msg# 6503

Re: 'Times' awards names Posted by rhapsody\_the\_bard December 17, 2005 - 16:53:52 Topic ID# 6486
--- In MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com, "Liz" <liz.warren@b...> wrote:
>
> Hi Marta
>
> Thanks for starting us off with a list of suggestions - always a
> difficult task. I think there are some great ideas here. But (being
> me) I'm going to put my canon-geek hat on and quibble with some of
> them. I'm not necessarily saying we shouldn't use your suggestions,
> just that we should maybe be aware of the canonical issues involved. :-D
>
> I've snipped a couple of awards where I have no comments.
>
> > 1. First Age and Earlier
> >
> > 1st: The Manwe Award
> > 2nd: The Ulmo Award
> > 3rd: The Aule Award
> >
> > (the three most important Valar)
>
> Uh, the three most important "male" Valar.... Why no "female" Valar?
> ;-)

I think it all depends on opinion....

1st: The Eru Iluvatar Award
2nd: The Manwe Award
3rd: The Varda Award

Varda, the most important Valier, equal to Manwe.

I am doubting a bit on the Lamps of Valar and so on, because those are
all events that took place *before* the start of the first Age. Sure
they can make pretty banners (but these things are easily
underestimated when you haven't hunted for banner images), but it
kinda rules out First Age things... And it is for the category First
Age and earlier. It would make more sense if there was an important
event from the First Age in there as well...

I would take out the Lamps of the Valar award (or another one) and
replace it with well, maybe the Noldolante award or The War of Wrath
award (although the Nirnaeth Arnoediad (Battle of Unnumbered Tears,
the last of the great battles between the Eldar and Morgoth) would be
a good replacement as well since that was a complete tragedy)...

Rhapsody

Msg# 6504

Re: 'Times' awards names Posted by rhapsody\_the\_bard December 17, 2005 - 16:55:59 Topic ID# 6486
--- In MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com, Marta Layton <melayton@g...> wrote:
> That's part of why I like Dwim's suggestion of the three lights so
> appealing. Will that work for you?

No not really to be honest. All are things that took place before the
First age even started... ah well, see my reasoning in the other post.
For me, I like the idea, but it doesn't cover the category fully.

Rhapsody

Msg# 6505

Re: 'Times' awards names Posted by Liz December 17, 2005 - 17:49:52 Topic ID# 6486
Hi Rhapsody

> I am doubting a bit on the Lamps of Valar and so on, because those are
> all events that took place *before* the start of the first Age. Sure
> they can make pretty banners (but these things are easily
> underestimated when you haven't hunted for banner images), but it
> kinda rules out First Age things... And it is for the category First
> Age and earlier. It would make more sense if there was an important
> event from the First Age in there as well...

I hope you don't mind me disagreeing, but I think Dwim's suggestion
covers the whole category perfectly.

The point is that each of the forms of light illuminates one of the
three major divisions of time within "First Age or Earlier".

* The Lamps of the Valar illuminated Arda before there was time
* The Light of the Trees illuminated Valinor during the Years of the Trees
* The Sun and Moon rose at the start of the First Age and illuminated
the First Age.

But perhaps it might be more consistent to simply have "The Sun and
Moon Award" rather than "The Rising of...."?

HTH

Cheers, Liz

Msg# 6506

Re: 'Times' awards names Posted by rhapsody\_the\_bard December 18, 2005 - 8:47:29 Topic ID# 6486
--- In MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com, "Liz" <liz.warren@b...> wrote:
>
> Hi Rhapsody
>
>> I am doubting a bit on the Lamps of Valar and so on, because those
>> are all events that took place *before* the start of the first Age.
>> Sure they can make pretty banners (but these things are easily
>> underestimated when you haven't hunted for banner images), but it
>> kinda rules out First Age things... And it is for the category
>> First Age and earlier. It would make more sense if there was an
>> important event from the First Age in there as well...
>
> I hope you don't mind me disagreeing, but I think Dwim's suggestion
> covers the whole category perfectly.

No of course not, we can always agree to disagree. I am still disagreeing.

> The point is that each of the forms of light illuminates one of the
> three major divisions of time within "First Age or Earlier".
>
> * The Lamps of the Valar illuminated Arda before there was time
> * The Light of the Trees illuminated Valinor during the Years of the
> Trees
> * The Sun and Moon rose at the start of the First Age and
> illuminated
> the First Age.

And the Second Age and the Third Age and the Fourth Age and the...
Therefore not fitting. It fits more the Multi-age category. As a First
Age writer I just don't see the logic of this proposal. If you do want
to work with the theme of light why don't you say The Silmarilli
(anglicized=Silmarils) Award, those are also important items that are
hallowed by light, wanted by basically everyone (including the Valar)
and involved the fate of *every* race and event during the First Age.

Even more that order makes more sense: Lamps of the Valar=thrown down,
so the trees were created, the trees were slewn, but the Silmarils
still carried on their light, so even the order makes more sense this
way. The Sun and the Moon are Maiar, not objects like the Lamps, The
two trees and the Silmarilli.

I hope I make sense.

Rhapsody

Msg# 6507

Re: 'Times' awards names Posted by Kathy December 18, 2005 - 15:12:50 Topic ID# 6486
--- In MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com, "rhapsody_the_bard"
> rhapsody74@g...
> wrote:
> If you do want to work with the theme of light why don't you say
> The Silmarilli (anglicized=Silmarils) Award, those are also
> important items that are hallowed by light, wanted by basically
> everyone (including the Valar)and involved the fate of *every* race
> and event during the First Age.
>
> Even more that order makes more sense: Lamps of the Valar=thrown
> down, so the trees were created, the trees were slewn, but the
> Silmarils still carried on their light, so even the order makes
> more sense this way. The Sun and the Moon are Maiar, not objects
> like the Lamps, The two trees and the Silmarilli.
>
> I hope I make sense.

So you're saying the awards would be:

1. The Lamps of the Valar Award
2. The Light of the Trees Award
3. The Silmarilli Award

Yes, that last would make sense in that at the end of the First Age
all the Silmarilli became inaccessible, if not actually destroyed.
While, as you point out, the Sun and the Moon continue on into future
Ages.

Kathy (Inkling)

Msg# 6508

Re: 'Times' awards names Posted by Elena Tiriel December 18, 2005 - 17:22:52 Topic ID# 6486
Hi Marigold!

Just a thought, "Bilbo's Farewell Party" might also work... it's refered to
as his "farewell feast" in the Tale of Years....

- Barbara

On 12/15/05, MarigoldCotton@aol.com <MarigoldCotton@aol.com> wrote:
>
> >4. Late Third Age:
>
> 1st: The Fell Winter Award
> 2nd: The Quest for Erebor Award
> 3rd: The Bilbo's Party Award
>
> For 3rd what about: The Party of Special Magnificence Award
>
> because although we know which party you are referring to, technically
> Bilbo had lots of parties and you mean this specific one...
>
> Marigold
>
> >Here's my suggestions for Times awards names
> >
> >1. First Age and Earlier
> >
> >1st: The Manwe Award
> >2nd: The Ulmo Award
> >3rd: The Aule Award
> >
> >(the three most important Valar)
> >
> >*or*
> >
> >1st: The Earendil Award
> >2nd: The Maedhros Award
> >3rd: The Maglor Award
> >
> >(the 'owners' of the silmarils at the end of the first age)
> >
> >2. Second Age:
> >
> >1st: The Númenor Award
> >2nd: The Eregion Award
> >3rd: The Khazad-dûm Award
> >
> >(the three regions that seem to see the most Second Age stories)
> >
> >3. Early Third Age:
> >
> >1st: The Elendil Award
> >2nd: The Isildur Award
> >3rd: The Éorl Award
> >
> >(the founders of the three kingdoms of Men founded in the early third
> >age - Arnor, Gondor, Rohan)
> >
> >4. Late Third Age:
> >
> >1st: The Fell Winter Award
> >2nd: The Quest for Erebor Award
> >3rd: The Bilbo's Party Award
> >
> >(three major events of this time period)
> >
> >*or*
> >
> >1st: The Boromir and Faramir Award
> >2nd: The Eomer and Eowyn Award
> >3rd: The Little Legolas Award
> >
> >(characters that often have stories about their childhood)
> >
> >5. Great Years:
> >
> >1st: The Halbarad Award
> >2nd: The Háma Award
> >3rd: The Dáin Award
> >
> >(three characters who died in the War of the Ring, yet are often
> >forgotten)
> >
> >6. The Fourth Age and Beyond:
> >
> >1st: The Annúminas Award
> >2nd: The Emyn Arnen Award (or: The Ithilien Award)
> >3rd: The Undertowers Award
> >
> >(three places built or re-built in the Fourth Age)
> >
> >7. Multi-Age:
> >
> >1st: The Celeborn Award
> >2nd: The Treebeard Award
> >3rd: The Durin Award
> >
> >(characters who seem to transcend the different ages of Middle-earth
> >and appear in more than one age)
> >
> >*or*
> >
> >1st: The Andúril Award
> >2nd: The Orcrist and Glamdring Award
> >3rd: The Sting Award
> >
> >(swords in the Ring War from earlier ages)
> >
> >Feel free to suggest your own, or changes to these!
> >
> >Marta
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >Yahoo! Groups Links
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
>
>
> --
> Marigold's Red Book
> http://marigold.tolkienshire.com
>
> Marigold's Recommendations Page
> http://www.geocities.com/marigoldsrecommendations/
>
> Marigold's Live Journal
> http://www.livejournal.com/users/marigoldg/
>
> Tales of The Red Book
> http://www.livejournal.com/users/talesofredbook/
>
>
>
>
> There, peeping among the cloud-wrack above a dark tor high up in the
> mountains, Sam saw a white star twinkle for a while. The beauty of it smote
> his heart, as he looked up out of the forsaken land, and hope returned to
> him. For like a shaft, clear and cold, the thought pierced him that in the
> end the Shadow was only a small and passing thing: there was light and high
> beauty forever beyond its reach.
> >
> >Sam, in Mordor, RoTK
>
>
>
>
>
> Yahoo! Groups Links
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Msg# 6509

Re: 'Times' awards names Posted by Elena Tiriel December 18, 2005 - 17:44:56 Topic ID# 6486
I second that! (or maybe third it -- sorry I'm coming to this discussion so
late, and haven't finished reading all the posts....)

Though I would make a very minor suggestion: The Light of the *Two* Trees
Award....

- Barbara

On 12/16/05, MarigoldCotton@aol.com <MarigoldCotton@aol.com> wrote:
>
> Dwim said:
>
> 1. The Lamps of the Valar Award
> 2. The Light of the Trees Award
> 3. The Rising of the Sun and Moon Award
>
> I like these very much, and think that they would also inspire some lovely
> icons!
>
> Marigold
>
> --
> Marigold's Red Book
> http://marigold.tolkienshire.com
>
> Marigold's Recommendations Page
> http://www.geocities.com/marigoldsrecommendations/
>
> Marigold's Live Journal
> http://www.livejournal.com/users/marigoldg/
>
> Tales of The Red Book
> http://www.livejournal.com/users/talesofredbook/
>
>
>
>
> There, peeping among the cloud-wrack above a dark tor high up in the
> mountains, Sam saw a white star twinkle for a while. The beauty of it smote
> his heart, as he looked up out of the forsaken land, and hope returned to
> him. For like a shaft, clear and cold, the thought pierced him that in the
> end the Shadow was only a small and passing thing: there was light and high
> beauty forever beyond its reach.
> >
> >Sam, in Mordor, RoTK
>
>
>
>
>
> Yahoo! Groups Links
>
>
>
>
>
>
>


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Msg# 6510

Re: 'Times' awards names Posted by dwimmer\_laik December 18, 2005 - 20:36:07 Topic ID# 6486
> Yes, that last would make sense in that at the end of the First Age
> all the Silmarilli became inaccessible, if not actually destroyed.
> While, as you point out, the Sun and the Moon continue on into future
> Ages.

Well, but thanks to Earendil, the light of at least one Silmaril
shines on into the Third Age as the morning and evening star, so it is
accessible in the same way that the sun and moon are accessible. So
there's no differentiation, fundamentally, between the light of the
Sun and Moon continuing into other ages and the light of the Silmaril
continuing into other Ages.

I suggested the Sun and Moon because they replace the light of the
Trees, just as the Trees replace the light of the lamps. The Silmarils
never enter into that order, conceived in that manner, and in any case
are just the same kind of light as the two Trees, not a different kind
of light. The succession does make sense if thought of in this way. I
suggested the first *rising* of the Sun and Moon because that is an
event that is unique to the First Age, or at least is no more
problematic than picking an ending event of any age.

I suppose I'm just not clear why it's a huge objection to say there's
two different forms of being being combined in one awards set if we
use Lamps, Trees, and Sun and Moon. The resons for their being put
together in a determinate series seem a lot more obvious to me than
the objection to putting them together, so perhaps someone can
enlighten me as to why it matters that we're dealing with Maiar in one
case and 'objective' light in the two other cases.

Dwim

Msg# 6511

First Age and Before awards Posted by Marta Layton December 18, 2005 - 23:42:58 Topic ID# 6511
Hey guys,

It seems that (again!) I'm behind on post-mortem posts. I'll try to get
caught up on at least some of them, but it will probably be tomorrow
night before I can do email again. And of course standard disclaimers
apply: if I don't reply, that doesn't mean I didn't read your email;
I'm just trying to get to as many as I can.

But for now, I'll just give some general comments.

I'm not particularly devoted to any of the suggestions made so far. Of
those presented, I think I like Dwim's best because it works around a
set of three. This is probably my personal inclination and may not be
strictly necessary, but I think it's a good thing because it gives some
rhyme or reason to what the choices are. It also means that nothing
important gets left out. If we try to pick the three most important
First Age elves, there will always be a fourth elf that people like but
that there just isn't room for.

If we don't like the three types of lights, what other sets of three
are there? The silmarils, obviously; is there some award we could have
around that?

What about the three major races that we see coming into existence in
this age: Elves, Men, Dwarves. Is there a name for the first dwarf to
awake at Cuivienen? If so, maybe we could have an award for him, an
award for the leader of the first men to come into Beleriand, and an
award for Durin as the most important of the fathers of the Dwarves
(IIRC)? Or perhaps just "The Quendi Award", "The Edain Award", and "The
Sons of Aule" Award? Something like that might work well.

I think - and here I show that I *really* need to re-read my Silm -
that there were about three kingdoms that were attacked in an effort by
the Feanorians to regain the silmarils. Might there be something in
that?

Anyway, you get the idea. That's where my thoughts are going. Does
anyone have awards around sets of three?

Marta

Msg# 6512

heads up - out of town for Christmas Posted by Marta Layton December 18, 2005 - 23:46:09 Topic ID# 6512
Hey guys,

Just as a heads up - I'll be visiting family overseas for Christmas.
I'm flying out on Thursday and should be back the 29th. I'll be able to
check email occasionally but not often.

I expect the discussion will be slow as we're all celebrating and doing
our own thing. But do feel free to continue on if I'm not around.

Marta

Msg# 6513

Re: 'Times' awards names Posted by rhapsody\_the\_bard December 19, 2005 - 0:45:44 Topic ID# 6486
--- In MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com, "dwimmer_laik" <dwimmer_laik@y...>
wrote:

> I suppose I'm just not clear why it's a huge objection to say
> there's two different forms of being being combined in one awards
> set if we use Lamps, Trees, and Sun and Moon. The resons for their
> being put together in a determinate series seem a lot more obvious
> to me than the objection to putting them together, so perhaps
> someone can enlighten me as to why it matters that we're dealing
> with Maiar in one case and 'objective' light in the two other cases.

Appareantly I am not coming across at all. I write a lot in this age
and I don't see *anything* that appeals to me as an author or that I
can identify with. I am trying to explain that, giving suggestions,
but it doesn't come across at all so I just simply am going to shut up
now. For me, it simply doesn't appeal and I don't go like: wow that is
a real nice sounding name or wow yeah that makes sense (it really
doesn't, but I am failing utterly here). Is it so strange to think
that you can't compare objects to Maiar?? Apples and pears, that is
how it reasons to me. Sun and Moon: all ages. Earendil? He & the
remaining one only *might* play a role during the final battle at the
end of Arda (if that prophecy was intended by Tolkien), but the Sons
of Feanor gave that one up for the sake of all (they still went after
the other two). Just never mind, really.

All I am saying, whatever is decided as of now on, I am not going to
comment on it anymore or explaining it or giving alternatives.

Rhapsody

Msg# 6514

Re: First Age and Before awards Posted by Laura December 19, 2005 - 2:13:03 Topic ID# 6511
*crawling forth from a mountain of work and rising out of obscurity*

Hey guys!

>> I'm not particularly devoted to any of the suggestions made so
>> far. Of those presented, I think I like Dwim's best because it
>> works around a set of three. This is probably my personal
>> inclination and may not be strictly necessary, but I think it's a
>> good thing because it gives some rhyme or reason to what the
>> choices are. It also means that nothing important gets left out. If
>> we try to pick the three most important First Age elves, there will
>> always be a fourth elf that people like but that there just isn't
>> room for.

For what it's worth, I like Dwim's suggestion, too. But I also like Rhapsody's suggestion of replacing Sun and Moon with Silmarils. Unfortunately, I can't choose between the two. I think I see where both sides are coming from, but I can't think of an easy way to solve it short of abandoning the light idea altogether and thinking of something else. And I can't come up with any better "something elses," either.

>> If we don't like the three types of lights, what other sets of
>> three are there? The silmarils, obviously; is there some award we
>> could have around that?

Well, there were three Silmarils, but I don't see a way to differentiate between them in a way that's easy to fit on a banner.

>> What about the three major races that we see coming into existence
>> in this age: Elves, Men, Dwarves. Is there a name for the first
>> dwarf to awake at Cuivienen? If so, maybe we could have an award
>> for him, an award for the leader of the first men to come into
>> Beleriand, and an award for Durin as the most important of the
>> fathers of the Dwarves (IIRC)? Or perhaps just "The Quendi
>> Award", "The Edain Award", and "The Sons of Aule" Award? Something
>> like that might work well.

You mean the first *elf* to awake? ;) Anyway, I guess I see this as a possibility, but I have a few reservations. For one thing, those three races weren't the only three wandering around. You've got a myriad of creatures paired up with the forces of evil, plus ents had to wander in at some point as well as Valar and Maiar at the very beginning. The other problem I see is the same thing that's bothering Rhapsody with Sun and Moon. Elves, Men, and Dwarves are very multi-age races. I'm not sure I want to restict them to a First Age category.

Actually, I'm now wondering why can't we use what we used for the Silmarillion category (Ainulindale, Valaquenta, and Akallabeth) but change Akallabeth to Quenta Silmarillion. If we end up using the separate LotR books to cover the Great Years category, using the divisions of the Silmarillion might be a nice parallel to that. And even though HOME goes through a lot of First Age events not included in the Silmarillion, at least you've got the major time periods covered.

>> I think - and here I show that I *really* need to re-read my Silm -
>> that there were about three kingdoms that were attacked in an
>> effort by the Feanorians to regain the silmarils. Might there be
>> something in that?

Alqualonde, Doriath, and Sirion? It's an interesting idea. I'm a little uneasy about naming awards after the locations of kinslayings, but it's a possibility.

Thundera

----------------------------------------------
--Okay, I'll make a deal with you: If we go
out on patrol and Gotham is quiet with no
sign of the Joker, we come back here, have
Christmas dinner, and watch ýItýs a
Wonderful Life.ý
--You know, Iýve never seen that. I could
never get past the title.

Robin and Batman - Batman: The Animated Series
----------------------------------------------

Msg# 6515

Re: 'Times' awards names Posted by sulriel December 19, 2005 - 8:58:21 Topic ID# 6486
I'm behind on my reading and posting, but I like Dwim's suggestions
as well. - for all the reasons already listed.

1. The Lamps of the Valar Award
2. The Light of the Trees Award
3. The Rising of the Sun and Moon Award

w/#2 being the light of the *Two* Trees
and keep 'rising' in the Sun and Moon.

as much as I'm a SilmFreak - I consider that Earendil still sails our
night skys, watching over us and providing light in the darkness, and
don't really consider that a valid 'time' option related to the First
Age. He is actually the connection the M-e has with the modern
world, so perhapes a Light of Earendil or Silmaril of Earendil Award
would be appropriate for a Fourth Age or modern day category.

Sulriel



--- In MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com, "dwimmer_laik" <dwimmer_laik@y...>
wrote:
>
>
> > Yes, that last would make sense in that at the end of the First
Age
> > all the Silmarilli became inaccessible, if not actually
destroyed.
> > While, as you point out, the Sun and the Moon continue on into
future
> > Ages.
>
> Well, but thanks to Earendil, the light of at least one Silmaril
> shines on into the Third Age as the morning and evening star, so it
is
> accessible in the same way that the sun and moon are accessible. So
> there's no differentiation, fundamentally, between the light of the
> Sun and Moon continuing into other ages and the light of the
Silmaril
> continuing into other Ages.
>
> I suggested the Sun and Moon because they replace the light of the
> Trees, just as the Trees replace the light of the lamps. The
Silmarils
> never enter into that order, conceived in that manner, and in any
case
> are just the same kind of light as the two Trees, not a different
kind
> of light. The succession does make sense if thought of in this way.
I
> suggested the first *rising* of the Sun and Moon because that is an
> event that is unique to the First Age, or at least is no more
> problematic than picking an ending event of any age.
>
> I suppose I'm just not clear why it's a huge objection to say
there's
> two different forms of being being combined in one awards set if we
> use Lamps, Trees, and Sun and Moon. The resons for their being put
> together in a determinate series seem a lot more obvious to me than
> the objection to putting them together, so perhaps someone can
> enlighten me as to why it matters that we're dealing with Maiar in
one
> case and 'objective' light in the two other cases.
>
> Dwim
>

Msg# 6516

Re: 'Times' award Posted by Marta Layton December 19, 2005 - 23:59:12 Topic ID# 6516
> Message: 1
> Date: Fri, 16 Dec 2005 14:51:09 -0000
> From: "Liz" <liz.warren@blueyonder.co.uk>
> Subject: Re: 'Times' awards names
>
> Hi Marta
>
> Thanks for starting us off with a list of suggestions - always a
> difficult task. I think there are some great ideas here.

It's not easy, of course. The difficult part is fatigue. I think there
were certain names that I didn't think through as well as others, just
because I was doing a bunch at once.

> But (being
> me) I'm going to put my canon-geek hat on and quibble with some of
> them. I'm not necessarily saying we shouldn't use your suggestions,
> just that we should maybe be aware of the canonical issues involved.
> :-D
>

Being aware is a good thing. I'm trying to balance strict canonicity
against what people will know and identify with, but it's impossible to
even try to do that without knowing what the canon says. Thanks for
your comment.

> I've snipped a couple of awards where I have no comments.
>
>> 1. First Age and Earlier
>>
>> 1st: The Manwe Award
>> 2nd: The Ulmo Award
>> 3rd: The Aule Award
>>
>> (the three most important Valar)
>
> Uh, the three most important "male" Valar.... Why no "female" Valar?
> ;-)
>
> To quote the Valaquenta: "Among them Nine were of chief power and
> reverence; but one is removed from their number, and Eight remain, the
> Aratar, the High Ones of Arda: Manwý and Varda, Ulmo, Yavanna and
> Aulý, Mandos, Nienna, and Oromý."
>
> It's hard to pick just three from eight, but I would suggest having
> Yavanna in there, since she created the Trees.
>

I think my hthought that Manwe, Aule, and Ulmo are the most important
comes from this paragraph:

Now to water had that Ainu whom the Elves can Ulmo turned his thought,
and of all most deeply was he instructed by Ilývatar in music. But of
the airs and winds Manwý most had pondered, who is the noblest of the
Ainur. Of the fabric of Earth had Aulý thought, to whom Ilývatar had
given skin and knowledge scarce less than to Melkor; but the delight
and pride of Aulý is in the deed of making, and in the thing made, and
neither m possession nor in his own mastery; wherefore he gives and
hoards not, and is free from care, passing ever on to some new work.

I think in my mind this crossed with the classical Greek story about
the titans and the sons of I think Chronus (Grk. equivalent of Saturn -
I'm blanking). The parallel between a god who govern the airs (Zeus),
the waters (Poseidon), and the earth (Hades), always struck me as
really strong, so I think I always subconsciously connected the two
stories. You're right, I can't find anywhere where Tolkien says the
three were the most important.

If we decide we want to go with a Valar-themed awards, we might choose
"Manwe and Varda", "Ulmo", and "Aule and Yavanna". But I think there
are better systems. I like the light, like I said, but that seems to be
controversial. I think someone suggested using the First Age divisions
of the Silm (Ainulindale, Valaquenta, and Quenta Silm.), and I have no
great problem with that.

<snip>
>> 3. Early Third Age:
>>
>> 1st: The Elendil Award
>> 2nd: The Isildur Award
>> 3rd: The ýorl Award
>>
>> (the founders of the three kingdoms of Men founded in the early third
>> age - Arnor, Gondor, Rohan)
>
> A few issues here. ;-)
>
> While I can see from our definition of Early Third Age that the
> foundation of Rohan falls into this timeframe, it's some 2500 years
> later than the other two and that just seems "odd" to me.(I guess I
> don't divide the Third Age up that way in my mind.)
>

Very true. I was struggling to come up with a third choice, and Rohan
was all I could come up with.

> Also, technically speaking, Arnor and Gondor were founded in the
> Second Age. And poor Anarion (who co-founded Gondor) doesn't get a
> look in here.... ;-)
>

For some weird reason I had forgotten he had cofounded. I guess because
I latched on to the passage about Isildur handing over the crown to
Anarion's son Melendil - it's easy to forget, at least for me. I seem
to have become very canon-impaired lately, so thanks for reminding me
(both Liz and everyone else who's done this).

> I'm struggling to think of an alternative, but maybe something like
>
> 1. The Valandil and Meneldil Awards (Isildur and Anarion's sons and
> the first two kings of Arnor and Gondor who ruled wholly in the Third
> Age)
> 2. The Thrýin I award (first King Under the Mountain)
> 3. The Eorl Award (first King of Rohan) (and btw, Eorl does not have
> an accent over it... confusing, I know.)
>

I don't like Valandil and Meneldil simply because it's too obscure; I
don't think people who aren't well versed in the period will know
exactly who they are, at least not that easily. But I do agree, what I
proposed above doesn't work. Dwim had some nice suggestions which I'll
get to in a bit, though probably tomorrow.

>> 4. Late Third Age:
>>
>> 1st: The Fell Winter Award
>> 2nd: The Quest for Erebor Award
>> 3rd: The Bilbo's Party Award
>>
>> (three major events of this time period)
>
> I like the suggestion of renaming the Bilbo's Party Award that's been
> made. But all these seem a little Hobbit-centred. (And I initially
> thought the Fell Winter = the Long Winter, when Helm died - which is
> my bad!)
>

Would it seem less hobbit-centric if we had another event besides Fell
Winter? Something that concerned men or elves especially? Some options
might be:

1. Death of the White Tree (2852)
2. Battle of Poros (2885)
3. Building of Henneth Annun (2901)
4. Erupting of Mount Doom (2954)
5. Sacking of the Corsair Fleet (2980)
6. Trothplight of Aragorn and Arwen (2980)
7. Dwarves Re-enter Moria (2989)

Any of these sound appealing? I know #2 is historically important, but
I think it's also pretty obscure and so I'm not crazy about it. I'm
particularly partial to #1 just because it's so iconic and
representative of the decline that seems to be happening in this
period.

>> *or*
>>
>> 1st: The Boromir and Faramir Award
>> 2nd: The Eomer and Eowyn Award
>> 3rd: The Little Legolas Award
>>
>> (characters that often have stories about their childhood)
>
> And this seems not Hobbity enough to me! Besides, I would think Little
> Legolas stories would be pre 2850. (I know we don't know exactly how
> old he is, but his comment in Fangorn suggests he personally doesn't
> see 500 years as a very long time, while he calls both Gimli, who is
> around 140, and Aragorn who is nearly 90, "children"!)
>

You're right, the names is a bad suggestion. I was actually trying to
come up with names that wouldn't cause problems with other awards --
Merry and Pippin was in humor, and "The Frodo and Sam Award" didn't
strike me as invoking the image of them as children somehow. I can't
explain it.

But anyway, let's go with the events instead of the children.

> * The Battle of the Five Armies Award (which overlaps the Quest of
> Erebor, of course, but maybe suggests a wider racial spread)

Excellent suggestion. If no one objects I'll go ahead and adopt this
one in the list I'm using to keep track of this.

>> 7. Multi-Age:
>>
>> 1st: The Celeborn Award
>> 2nd: The Treebeard Award
>> 3rd: The Durin Award
>>
>> (characters who seem to transcend the different ages of Middle-earth
>> and appear in more than one age)
>
> A couple of other suggestions:
>
> * The Tom Bombadil Award (As Elrond says: "But I had forgotten
> Bombadil, if indeed this is still the same that walked the woods and
> hills long ago, and even then was older than the old. That was not
> then his name. Iarwain Ben-adar we called him, oldest and fatherless.
> But many another name he has since been given by other folk: Forn by
> the Dwarves, Orald by Northern Men, and other names beside.")
>
> * The Glorfindel Award (assuming you buy into the re-embodiment theory)
>

I was rather hoping to side-step the Glorfindel controversy. *grin*
Seriously, though, Tom Bombadil as a name is great. SI thought of him
but decided against it because he's already a humor name. Which means
we'll have to come up with a new one there, but that should be doable.
"Gaffer Gamgee Award" could work quite well there, for instance.

And *now* to bed, and now to bed!

Marta

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Msg# 6517

Re: 'Times' awards name Posted by Marta Layton December 20, 2005 - 6:30:11 Topic ID# 6517
>

Snipping thoughout...

> 3. Early Third Age:
>
>> 1st: The Elendil Award
>> 2nd: The Isildur Award
>> 3rd: The Éorl Award
>>
>> (the founders of the three kingdoms of Men founded in the early third
>> age - Arnor, Gondor, Rohan)
>
> ::And I think the suggestion for Early Third Age is perfect.
>

Some people have pointed out some problems with this one, and Dwim has
suggested some other kingdoms that were all founded in the third age.
The problem is that Gondor and Arnor were founded in the second age.

But I do think "kingdoms founded in this time period" is a good way to
go.

>> 4. Late Third Age:
>>
>> 1st: The Fell Winter Award
>> 2nd: The Quest for Erebor Award
>> 3rd: The Bilbo's Party Award
>>
>> (three major events of this time period)
>>
>
> ::I agree with a couple of others that
> "3rd The Long-Expected Party Award"
> would be better
>

I've changed that in the list of awards names I'm keeping on my
computer, so I can keep track of it all. "Lone-Expected Party" is
definitely the better phrase.

>> 1st: The Boromir and Faramir Award
>> 2nd: The Eomer and Eowyn Award
>> 3rd: The Little Legolas Award
>>
>> (characters that often have stories about their childhood)
>>
>
> ::I really don't care for those; there are just as many stories about
> Young
> Frodo, Little Sam and Merry and Wee Pippin, and there also seem to be
> a lot
> of stories about Little Estel. And Legolas' childhood would not have
> been
> taking place then, anyway, would it? He was most certainly at *least*
> born
> in the Early Third Age if not earlier. Otherwise, what about all his
> remarks
> about feeling young in Fangorn?
>

You're definitely right about Legolas. Actually I had meant to change
that to another character but forgot. It doesn't really matter, though;
I think events is definitely the way to go for this event.

I do know there are a lot of hobbit stories out there, and I tried to
figure out a way to give them an award. Like I said to Liz, I was
concerned about the other "Merry and Pippin award". Your names might
have worked really well, if we had decided to go that way.

>>
>> 5. Great Years:
>>
>> 1st: The Halbarad Award
>> 2nd: The Háma Award
>> 3rd: The Dáin Award
>>
>> (three characters who died in the War of the Ring, yet are often
>> forgotten)
>
> ::Or how about defining events of the Great Years:
> Going in chronological order (which is what you seem to be doing) how
> about:
> 1st The Council of Elrond Award
> 2nd The Sammath Naur Award (or The Cracks of Doom award or The
> Destruction
> of the Ring Award)
> 3rd The Grey Havens Award
>

The trouble is that everyone has their own idea of what the turning
point is. For me, I'd say Parth Galen, Helm's Deep, and Cracks of Doom.

I know Dwim made a suggestion to use the three books of Lord of the
Rings. This seems a tad boring to me (I felt the same way when they
were for "The Lord of the Rings"), but I think that might be for the
best.

>>
>> 6. The Fourth Age and Beyond:
>>
>> 1st: The Annúminas Award
>> 2nd: The Emyn Arnen Award (or: The Ithilien Award)
>> 3rd: The Undertowers Award
>>
>> (three places built or re-built in the Fourth Age)
>>
> ::I think I like these very much. I could go for them--(I think I like
> Ithilien better than Emyn Arnen, but could go with either.)
>

I'll set up a poll tonight on the Emyn Arnen/Ithilien issue. I think
this one at least we can nail down as soon as that's resolved.

>> 7. Multi-Age:
>>
>> 1st: The Celeborn Award
>> 2nd: The Treebeard Award
>> 3rd: The Durin Award
>>
>> (characters who seem to transcend the different ages of Middle-earth
>> and appear in more than one age)
>>
>> *or*
>>
>> 1st: The Andúril Award
>> 2nd: The Orcrist and Glamdring Award
>> 3rd: The Sting Award
>>
>> (swords in the Ring War from earlier ages)
>>
> ::I like both of these lists, though I think I like the second one
> better.
>

I'm fine with either one, though with the first I'd probably make 1st
place "The Tom Bombadil Award" and not have "The Durin Award".

Shall we have a poll on this question, as well, or is this enough of a
non-issue that people want me to choose one way or the other?

Marta

Msg# 6518

Re: 'Times' award Posted by Elena Tiriel December 20, 2005 - 8:35:31 Topic ID# 6516
A few random thoughts:

On 12/19/05, Marta Layton <melayton@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > Message: 1
> > Date: Fri, 16 Dec 2005 14:51:09 -0000
> > From: "Liz" <liz.warren@blueyonder.co.uk>
> > Subject: Re: 'Times' awards names
> >


>> 1. First Age and Earlier
> >>
> >> 1st: The Manwe Award
> >> 2nd: The Ulmo Award
> >> 3rd: The Aule Award
> >>
> >> (the three most important Valar)
> >
> > Uh, the three most important "male" Valar.... Why no "female" Valar?
> > ;-)
> >
> [quotes and classical Greek references snipped]
>

If we decide we want to go with a Valar-themed awards, we might choose
> "Manwe and Varda", "Ulmo", and "Aule and Yavanna". But I think there
> are better systems. I like the light, like I said, but that seems to be
> controversial. I think someone suggested using the First Age divisions
> of the Silm (Ainulindale, Valaquenta, and Quenta Silm.), and I have no
> great problem with that.


YES! EXACTLY! *If* we choose to go with the Valar theme rather than the
Lights Theme (which I really like, as long as #2 is *Two* Trees) or the Silm
Theme (which is also fine with me), then I really believe that these are the
names to use. Any list of important Valar that does not include Varda is
just woefully incomplete in my mind - she is the one called on by the Elves
the most.... and your solution of including the two most important *couples*
is a good one.... we get the 5 most important and active Aratar in 3 award
names..... Very clever!


> >> 4. Late Third Age:
> >>
> >> 1st: The Fell Winter Award
> >> 2nd: The Quest for Erebor Award
> >> 3rd: The Bilbo's Party Award
> >>
> >> (three major events of this time period)
> >
> > I like the suggestion of renaming the Bilbo's Party Award that's been
> > made.


Ah yes... I had suggested Bilbo's Farewell Party, but I really like the
other suggestion of the Long Expected Party... that's perfect!


[snip]
> Would it seem less hobbit-centric if we had another event besides Fell
> Winter? Something that concerned men or elves especially? Some options
> might be:
>
> 1. Death of the White Tree (2852)
> 2. Battle of Poros (2885)
> 3. Building of Henneth Annun (2901)
> 4. Erupting of Mount Doom (2954)
> 5. Sacking of the Corsair Fleet (2980)
> 6. Trothplight of Aragorn and Arwen (2980)
> 7. Dwarves Re-enter Moria (2989)
>
> Any of these sound appealing? I know #2 is historically important, but
> I think it's also pretty obscure and so I'm not crazy about it. I'm
> particularly partial to #1 just because it's so iconic and
> representative of the decline that seems to be happening in this
> period.


I really like #1 also.

I believe that #2 should rightly be called the Battle of the Crossings of
Poros, not the Battle of Poros..... but I agree that it's obscure....
probably no one but Rohan nuts (like me) even know the names of the twin
sons and heirs who died there (Folcred and Fastred, sons of Folcwine, King
of Rohan), or that it was one of the *other* times that the Rohirrim
fulfilled the Oath of Eorl.... Sorry, it's 6 am and I'm blithering as only
obsessive geeks who like to enter juicy details of Middle-earth battles into
the HASA Resources Library can do.... ;-)

This is really nice work, Marta and everyone else who contributed!

- Barbara


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Msg# 6519

Re: 'Times' awards names Posted by Marta Layton December 20, 2005 - 17:28:22 Topic ID# 6486
>

I've referred to a lot of Dwim's comments in passing, but I'll address
her properly here. My apologies if I repeat myself.

> Message: 3
> Date: Fri, 16 Dec 2005 19:36:23 -0000
> From: "dwimmer_laik" <dwimmer_laik@yahoo.com>
> Subject: Re: 'Times' awards names
>
> --- In MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com, Marta Layton <melayton@g...> wrote:
>>
>> Here's my suggestions for Times awards names
>>
>> 1. First Age and Earlier
>>
>> 1st: The Manwe Award
>> 2nd: The Ulmo Award
>> 3rd: The Aule Award
>>
>> (the three most important Valar)
>
> How about:
>
> 1. The Lamps of the Valar Award
> 2. The Light of the Trees Award
> 3. The Rising of the Sun and Moon Award
>
>
> That would nicely fit the theme of "Time", and also get in the three
> major different ways of calculating time by different sources of light
> in the First Age and earlier.
>
> (Plus, I have a feeling these may make for far easier visuals--no
> purple Ulmo, for example, and most people can probably find images of
> lamps, trees, suns, and moons that could be made into nice banners.)
>

I still find myself partial to this idea, even though a lot of people
find it controversial. I think at this point the best way to settle
this will be to set up a poll of some of the major options batted
around, and go with the winner. I'll do that in a minute.

>
>> 3. Early Third Age:
>>
>> 1st: The Elendil Award
>> 2nd: The Isildur Award
>> 3rd: The Éorl Award
>
> Liz has pointed out that Anarion is absent, plus Arnor and Gondor came
> into being in the Second Age.
>
> How about:
>
> 1. The Thrones of Osgiliath Award
> 2. The Founding of the Shire Award
> 3. The Delving of Erebor Award
>
> Two regions newly founded in the (relatively) early Third Age, plus
> the acknowledgment that in Osgiliath, both Isildur and Anarion ruled
> as joint-kings.
>
> Or one could use the Eorl and swap out the Osgiliath award for
> something like "The Raising of Meduseld", and switch the order around
> if desired. Then there would still be three political entities founded
> in the early third age.
>

I like this very much - a lot more than my original suggestion,
incidentally. But I think I like Rohan being mentioned, especially if
we're looking at using the withering of the White tree for Late Third
Age. So why don't we have:

Early Third Age

1st: The Raising of Meduseld Award
2nd: The Founding of the Shire Award
3rd: The Delving of Erebor Award

Late Third Age:

1st: The Death of the White Tree Award
2nd: The Battle of the Five Armies Award
3rd: The Long-Expected Party Award

Is that okay with everyone?

>> *or*
>>
>> 1st: The Boromir and Faramir Award
>> 2nd: The Eomer and Eowyn Award
>> 3rd: The Little Legolas Award
>>
>> (characters that often have stories about their childhood)
>
> There are, I think, far too many characters whose childhoods are
> portrayed for us to choose three without being arbitrary about it. I'd
> rather events or some artifacts that are significant be used.
>

Agreed.

>> 5. Great Years:
>>
>> 1st: The Halbarad Award
>> 2nd: The Háma Award
>> 3rd: The Dáin Award
>>
>> (three characters who died in the War of the Ring, yet are often
>> forgotten)
>
> At the risk of confusing matters, why not use the book titles here?
> FOTR, TTT, ROTK. Lots of options for banners, and it just makes sense
> if we're thinking of thigns that cover these years.
>

It does make sense, and I'm not sure why I didn't suggest it to begin
with. Possibly because I was trying to stay away from source material,
but you're right, in this case it definitely does work. I don't find it
particularly exciting, but I can certainly live with it.

Though I will admit, I'm surprised you didn't jump at the chance for an
award honouring Halbarad's death. :-P

>> 6. The Fourth Age and Beyond:
>>
>> 1st: The Annúminas Award
>> 2nd: The Emyn Arnen Award (or: The Ithilien Award)
>> 3rd: The Undertowers Award
>
> Like the Emyn Arnen Award better than the Ithilien award. Keeps with
> the tower theme.
>

I'll set up another poll on this issue. Just to be on the safe side;
I'm really fine with either.

>> 7. Multi-Age:
>>
>> 1st: The Celeborn Award
>> 2nd: The Treebeard Award
>> 3rd: The Durin Award
>>
>> (characters who seem to transcend the different ages of Middle-earth
>> and appear in more than one age)
>
> I like Liz's idea of the Tom Bombadil award put in here somewhere. He
> is at least instantly recognizable thanks to the hat and boots.
>

I like that, too. Like I said I was concerned about finding another
humour award, but I think that's doable.

Marta

Msg# 6520

New poll for MEFAwards Posted by MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com December 20, 2005 - 17:35:43 Topic ID# 3
Enter your vote today! A new poll has been created for the
MEFAwards group:

Which of these awards themes do you prefer for "Times: First Age and Earlier"? You are not voting for the exact wording of the awards, but rather the theme they will be organized around. If you don't like a specific award title, still choose that option and we'll settle the exact names later.

o types of light (i.e., 1st = "The Lamps of the Valar Award"; 2nd = "The Light of the Two Trees Award"; 3rd = "The Sun and Moon Award")
o important Valar (i.e., 1st = "The Manwý and Varda Award"; 2nd = "The Ulmo Award"; 3rd = "The Aulý and Yavanna Award")
o The two "children of Iluvatar" and the "adopted" race (i.e., 1st = "The Quendi Award"; 2nd = "The Edain Award"; 3rd = "The Sons of Aulý Award")
o major divisions of The Silmarillion (i.e., 1st = "The Ainulindale Award"; 2nd = "The Valaquenta Award"; 3rd = "The Quenta Silmarillion")
o I decline to answer.


To vote, please visit the following web page:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/MEFAwards/surveys?id=2081795

Note: Please do not reply to this message. Poll votes are
not collected via email. To vote, you must go to the Yahoo! Groups
web site listed above.

Thanks!

Msg# 6521

New poll for MEFAwards Posted by MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com December 20, 2005 - 17:38:33 Topic ID# 3
Enter your vote today! A new poll has been created for the
MEFAwards group:

Which of these awards titles do you prefer? It will be used for second place in the "Times: Fourth Age and Beyond" award.

o The Emyn Arnen Award
o The Ithilien Award
o I decline to answer.


To vote, please visit the following web page:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/MEFAwards/surveys?id=2081797

Note: Please do not reply to this message. Poll votes are
not collected via email. To vote, you must go to the Yahoo! Groups
web site listed above.

Thanks!

Msg# 6522

Re: 'Times' awards names Posted by Marta Layton December 21, 2005 - 6:24:15 Topic ID# 6486
> Message: 2
> Date: Sat, 17 Dec 2005 10:49:57 -0000
> From: "Liz" <liz.warren@blueyonder.co.uk>
> Subject: Re: 'Times' awards names

> <snip>
>>> 5. Great Years:
>>>
>>> 1st: The Halbarad Award
>>> 2nd: The Háma Award
>>> 3rd: The Dáin Award
>>>
>>> (three characters who died in the War of the Ring, yet are often
>>> forgotten)
>>
>> At the risk of confusing matters, why not use the book titles here?
>> FOTR, TTT, ROTK. Lots of options for banners, and it just makes sense
>> if we're thinking of thigns that cover these years.
>
> I agree that this makes things simpler. The only slight drawback I see
> is that someone could end up with a RotK Award for a story set during
> FotR, which would be a bit odd. But probably no odder than, say,
> getting The Háma Award for a story about The Scouring of the Shire....
>

I think this is always going to be a problem with having the awards be
named like this. I'm more concerned that they at least refer to the
type of stories that will be competing. My suggestion didn't, because
there were loads of races that didn't have a person mentioned. I think
the one to use books works much better because it covers all of the
time represented in the awards.

Marta

Msg# 6523

Re: 'Times' awards names Posted by Marta Layton December 21, 2005 - 6:32:48 Topic ID# 6486
> Message: 4
> Date: Sat, 17 Dec 2005 17:41:09 -0000
> From: "dwimmer_laik" <dwimmer_laik@yahoo.com>
> Subject: Re: 'Times' awards names
>
>
>>> 4. Late Third Age:
>>>
>>> 1st: The Fell Winter Award
>>> 2nd: The Quest for Erebor Award
>>> 3rd: The Bilbo's Party Award
>>>
>>> (three major events of this time period)
>
> Had a thought just now about this set of awards, even though it
> doesn't include the Quest for Erebor. What if the awards for the Late
> Third Age were:
>
> 1. The Ruling Ring Award
> 2. The Three Rings Award
> 3. The Nine Rings Award
>
> Reasoning: the surviving Rings are what will shape the defining (and
> closing) event of the Third Age--the Ring War and the departure of
> the Ring-bearers; the Late Third Age is the period when the various
> factions begin to move towards that war.
>

I see your point on this, but I still think we should go with key
events of this period. My reasoning is:

1. None of these rings were unique to this period
2. None of these rings were created in this period
3. None of these rings were as active as they were in other periods.
For example, the Nine hadn't been abroad in years before the Great
Years.

It would be interesting, so I'll go with popular opinion on this one.
But I think the different events would work better. At this point I'm
leaning toward:

1st: The Death of the White Tree Award
2nd: The Battle of the Five Armies Award
3rd: The Long-Expected Party Award

Marta

Msg# 6524

"Times" Awards and Category names - recap Posted by Marta Layton December 21, 2005 - 17:54:23 Topic ID# 6524
Hey guys,

Just so everyone's on the same page and I'm sure I have it right,
here's the categories and awards for the "Times" division. Feel free to
nitpick, including missing diacriticals and whatever else.

A. First Age and Earlier

(to be determined by poll)

B. Second Age

- 1st Place: The Númenor Award
- 2nd Place: The Eregion Award
- 3rd Place: The Khazad-Dûm Award

C. Early Third Age

- 1st Place: The Raising of Meduseld Award
- 2nd Place: The Founding of the Shire Award
- 3rd Place: The Delving of Erebor Award

D. Late Third Age

- 1st Place: The Death of the White Tree Award
- 2nd Place: The Battle of the Five Armies Award
- 3rd: The Long-Expected Party Award

E. The Great Years

- 1st Place: The Fellowship of the Ring Award
- 2nd Place: The Two Towers Award
- 3rd Place: The Return of the King Award

e. The Fourth Age and Beyond

- 1st Place: The Annúminas Award
- 2nd Place: (to be determined by poll)
- 3rd Place: The Undertowers Award

G. Multi-Age:

- 1st Place: The Tom Bombadil Award
- 2nd Place: The Treebeard Award
- 3rd Place: The Celeborn Award

Marta

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Msg# 6525

Re: "Times" Awards and Category names - recap Posted by Kathy December 21, 2005 - 18:17:57 Topic ID# 6524
--- In MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com, Marta Layton <melayton@g...> wrote:
>
> Just so everyone's on the same page and I'm sure I have it right,
> here's the categories and awards for the "Times" division. Feel
> free to nitpick, including missing diacriticals and whatever else.
> <snip>

What happened to this idea, I kind of liked it:

>> 7. Multi-Age:
>>
>> *or*
>>
>> 1st: The Andúril Award
>> 2nd: The Orcrist and Glamdring Award
>> 3rd: The Sting Award
>>
>> (swords in the Ring War from earlier ages)
>>
> ::I like both of these lists, though I think I like the second one
> better.
>

Kathy (Inkling)

Msg# 6526

Re: "flame" review... but not really - sorry so late! Posted by Naresha December 22, 2005 - 6:52:58 Topic ID# 5941
Okay... firstly, I know this is once again
EXCEPTIONALLY late. I won't go into why, but in
a nutshell... Pre-Christmas and Christmas time
is HELL for events! You go from working nights
and sleeping days to just plain WORKING! Add to
that studying two nights a week... You get the
idea! ANYWAY!

> I agree - it does seem counter-productive to
leave a review
> for a piece that you didn't really enjoy. The
competition was > pretty fierce in some of the
sub-cats, and a single point or
> in some cases even a few characters really
could make a
> difference.

For me, it wasn't a case of win or lose - it was
one of only three reviews I got total, but as you
said - counter-productive to the max!

> Do you have any suggestions for how we handle
something like
> this? If we remove the review then the author
doesn't get
> those points, and if they've already seen the
review more than > likely so we're just harming
the author further.

I suggest that perhaps the author is given the
ability to screen their own reviews if they come
across something like this. I personally don't
have issue with others seeing this, but I am sure
some people will. Also, I think perhaps we
should have some way that people can report what
they feel to be a "flame" review and that person
can be investigated by MEFA people - we had MORE
than enough volunteers this year, I'm sure
someone would relish the job of checking on
possible flames! And given this appears to be
the only one, it doesn't seem like it would be
all that time-consuming!

> My guy says we should do what we can to
discourage this type
> of review - but if one's made, leave it alone.

That's all well and good, but there isn't much
point in saying "This is bad" and then not acting
on it when it happens. It's like any rule that
is based around bad behaviour - if you're not
going to enforce it, don't bother having it!
Especially with something like flaming, it is a
very sensitive, very personal issue and it can
severely impact on the person it is directed at.
It is something that needs to be dealt with, not
just talked about and left alone.

> I don't mind it being discussed. It could cause
problems, I'm > just not sure how to fix it,
short of maybe screening all the > comments.
That's not *completely* out of the question, but
it > would be very work-intensive, and it would
mean we'd have to
> make a lot more judgement calls - something I'd
rather avoid
> if possible.

Like I said above, I think perhaps some sort of
system where it is possible to either remove
and/or hide the review. Also, I think that the
threat of banning those who leave a flame review
may help deter it from happening. But we also
need to be open to discourse between any authors
and any reviewers that they feel have flamed
them.

Resha,

~To forgive calls upon our love, to forget calls upon our strength~

AIM: Naresha21 MSN: candyman_gypsy@hotmail.com Yahoo: fruitcake5m1
Personal LJ: http://www.livejournal.com/users/nareshaninya/
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My Website! Slash Me Happy
http://www.websamba.com/SlashMeHappy

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Send instant messages to your online friends http://au.messenger.yahoo.com

Msg# 6527

Re: "flame" review... but not really Posted by Naresha December 22, 2005 - 8:52:12 Topic ID# 5941
> should there be a sign that a review was made
but is hidden?

I think that would be a good thing, at least it
gives an accurate portrayl of how many reviews
were made to anyone who cares to look, but it
allows certain ones to be hidden from view.


Send instant messages to your online friends http://au.messenger.yahoo.com

Msg# 6528

Re: 'Times' awards names Posted by dwimmer\_laik December 23, 2005 - 13:05:28 Topic ID# 6486
<snip>
> I see your point on this, but I still think we should go with key
> events of this period. My reasoning is:
>
> 1. None of these rings were unique to this period
> 2. None of these rings were created in this period
> 3. None of these rings were as active as they were in other periods.
> For example, the Nine hadn't been abroad in years before the Great
> Years.
>
> It would be interesting, so I'll go with popular opinion on this one.
> But I think the different events would work better. At this point I'm
> leaning toward:
>
> 1st: The Death of the White Tree Award
> 2nd: The Battle of the Five Armies Award
> 3rd: The Long-Expected Party Award

Makes sense to me. I was having trouble coming up with things that fit
together, and the Ring theme was the only one I could come up with.
Your list gets in a key event of the Quest for Erebor (one could, I
suppose sub in The Dragon's Downfall for The Battle of Five Armies),
and two key events, at disparate locations, that will be important for
the unfolding of the Great Years. Works for me.

Dwim

Msg# 6529

Re: 'Times' awards names Posted by rhapsody\_the\_bard December 23, 2005 - 14:18:05 Topic ID# 6486
--- In MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com, "dwimmer_laik" <dwimmer_laik@y...>
wrote:
>
> <snip>
> > I see your point on this, but I still think we should go with key
> > events of this period. My reasoning is:
> >
> > 1. None of these rings were unique to this period
> > 2. None of these rings were created in this period
> > 3. None of these rings were as active as they were in other periods.
> > For example, the Nine hadn't been abroad in years before the Great
> > Years.
> >
> > It would be interesting, so I'll go with popular opinion on this one.
> > But I think the different events would work better. At this point I'm
> > leaning toward:
> >
> > 1st: The Death of the White Tree Award

But the White Tree did die before this time period... at least at
Numenor (Nimloth, who perished in the fires of and I thought earlier
on as well (if my memory serves me correctly .. And Telperion (thge
1st one) was also called The White tree... (who died way before the
first age), then there is the tree of Tol Eressëa, Celeborn, was
itself descended from Galathilion, the White Tree that stood in Tirion
that was made by Yavanna herself (an image of Telperion). Then there
was the white tree in Minas Ithil... the seedling rescued by Isildur
(again, he should get his own rescueing seedlings award), which gave
birth to a couple of white trees that resided in the courtyard of
Minas Tirith...

So... eum. Here are the White trees I know of (and all died by the
looks of it)... Telperion -> Gathalion -> Celeborn -> Nimloth ->
various versions of the White trees of Gondor...

*searches for cover*

Rhapsody

Msg# 6530

Re: 'Times' awards names Posted by Laura December 23, 2005 - 18:30:12 Topic ID# 6486
-- "rhapsody_the_bard" <rhapsody74@gmail.com> wrote:
>> But the White Tree did die before this time period... at least at
>> Numenor (Nimloth, who perished in the fires of and I thought earlier
>> on as well (if my memory serves me correctly .. And Telperion (thge
>> 1st one) was also called The White tree... (who died way before the
>> first age), then there is the tree of Tol Eressýa, Celeborn, was
>> itself descended from Galathilion, the White Tree that stood in
>> Tirion that was made by Yavanna herself (an image of Telperion).
>> Then there was the white tree in Minas Ithil... the seedling
>> rescued by Isildur (again, he should get his own rescueing
>> seedlings award), which gave birth to a couple of white trees that
>> resided in the courtyard of Minas Tirith...

Is there a way to differentiate between the trees? Without creating something that would be overly cumbersome as a banner title? That might solve the problem.

Actually, though, I had a slight issue with the award title "Death of the White Tree," too, but for entirely different reasons. It's not a big issue and I certainly live with the award title if everyone else likes it, but...

It might just be me, but does anyone else think it odd to have "Death of the White Tree" as an AWARD title? It's kind of a negative thing. And while there are other negative-sounding award titles, they're generally for genres like horror and villains. I guess I'm looking for something a bit more positive. Something...I don't know, like "Calling of the White Council" or something like that. Something with less of a negative spin than the dying White Tree.

That's my thought, anyway. Like I said, I don't have any major objections to "Death of the White Tree." But something to do with the White Council or the rebuilding of the White Tower or something along those lines could be a possibility.

Thundera

-----------------------------------------------
--Okay, I'll make a deal with you: If we go out
on patrol and Gotham is quiet with no sign of
the Joker, we come back here, have Christmas
dinner, and watch ýItýs a Wonderful Life.ý
--You know, Iýve never seen that. I could never
get past the title.

Robin and Batman - Batman: The Animated Series
-----------------------------------------------

Msg# 6531

Re: 'Times' awards names Posted by Kathy December 24, 2005 - 0:10:14 Topic ID# 6486
--- In MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com, "Laura" <thunderalaura@j...> wrote:
>
> It might just be me, but does anyone else think it odd to
> have "Death of the White Tree" as an AWARD title? It's kind of a
> negative thing. And while there are other negative-sounding award
> titles, they're generally for genres like horror and villains. I
> guess I'm looking for something a bit more positive. Something...I
> don't know, like "Calling of the White Council" or something like
> that. Something with less of a negative spin than the dying White
> Tree.
>
> That's my thought, anyway. Like I said, I don't have any major
> objections to "Death of the White Tree." But something to do with
> the White Council or the rebuilding of the White Tower or something
> along those lines could be a possibility.
>
I've had the same thought myself a few times during these
discussions...it seems like award titles should be, y'know, uplifting
and celebratory and all that. But as I have no alternatives to
suggest at the moment, I'll just close by saying:

Have a festive and joyous holiday, everyone!

Kathy (Inkling)

Msg# 6532

Poll results for MEFAwards Posted by MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com December 24, 2005 - 3:05:25 Topic ID# 123
The following MEFAwards poll is now closed. Here are the
final results:


POLL QUESTION: Which of these awards themes do you prefer for "Times: First Age and Earlier"? You are not voting for the exact wording of the awards, but rather the theme they will be organized around. If you don't like a specific award title, still choose that option and we'll settle the exact names later.

CHOICES AND RESULTS
- types of light (i.e., 1st = "The Lamps of the Valar Award"; 2nd = "The Light of the Two Trees Award"; 3rd = "The Sun and Moon Award"), 7 votes, 70.00%
- important Valar (i.e., 1st = "The Manwý and Varda Award"; 2nd = "The Ulmo Award"; 3rd = "The Aulý and Yavanna Award"), 0 votes, 0.00%
- The two "children of Iluvatar" and the "adopted" race (i.e., 1st = "The Quendi Award"; 2nd = "The Edain Award"; 3rd = "The Sons of Aulý Award"), 1 votes, 10.00%
- major divisions of The Silmarillion (i.e., 1st = "The Ainulindale Award"; 2nd = "The Valaquenta Award"; 3rd = "The Quenta Silmarillion"), 1 votes, 10.00%
- I decline to answer., 1 votes, 10.00%



For more information about this group, please visit
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/MEFAwards

For help with Yahoo! Groups, please visit
http://help.yahoo.com/help/us/groups/

Msg# 6533

Poll results for MEFAwards Posted by MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com December 24, 2005 - 3:06:30 Topic ID# 123
The following MEFAwards poll is now closed. Here are the
final results:


POLL QUESTION: Which of these awards titles do you prefer? It will be used for second place in the "Times: Fourth Age and Beyond" award.

CHOICES AND RESULTS
- The Emyn Arnen Award, 5 votes, 45.45%
- The Ithilien Award, 6 votes, 54.55%
- I decline to answer., 0 votes, 0.00%



For more information about this group, please visit
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/MEFAwards

For help with Yahoo! Groups, please visit
http://help.yahoo.com/help/us/groups/

Msg# 6534

Re: Poll Results for MEFAwards Posted by Marta Layton December 24, 2005 - 7:59:23 Topic ID# 6534
> Message: 5
> Date: 24 Dec 2005 09:05:22 -0000
> From: MEFAwards
> Subject: Poll results for MEFAwards
>
>
> The following MEFAwards poll is now closed. Here are the
> final results:
>
>
> POLL QUESTION: Which of these awards themes do you prefer for "Times:
> First Age and Earlier"? You are not voting for the exact wording of
> the awards, but rather the theme they will be organized around. If you
> don't like a specific award title, still choose that option and we'll
> settle the exact names later.
>
> CHOICES AND RESULTS

Combining with the LJ poll...

- types of light (i.e., 1st = "The Lamps of the Valar Award"; 2nd =
"The Light of the Two Trees Award"; 3rd = "The Sun and Moon Award"), 10
votes
- important Valar (i.e., 1st = "The Manwë and Varda Award"; 2nd = "The
Ulmo Award"; 3rd = "The Aulë and Yavanna Award"), 2 votes
- The two "children of Iluvatar" and the "adopted" race (i.e., 1st =
"The Quendi Award"; 2nd = "The Edain Award"; 3rd = "The Sons of Aulë
Award"), 1 votes
- major divisions of The Silmarillion (i.e., 1st = "The Ainulindale
Award"; 2nd = "The Valaquenta Award"; 3rd = "The Quenta Silmarillion"),
3 votes
- I decline to answer., 2 votes

>
> POLL QUESTION: Which of these awards titles do you prefer? It will be
> used for second place in the "Times: Fourth Age and Beyond" award.
>
> CHOICES AND RESULTS
>

- The Emyn Arnen Award, 6 votes
- The Ithilien Award, 11 votes
- I decline to answer., 2 votes

So it looks like "types of light" and "The Ithilien Award" are both
clear winners. I'll set up a poll to look at whether we should have
Lamps/Trees/Silmarilli or Lamps/Trees/Sun and Moon when I get back to
the US next weekend.

Marta

Msg# 6535

Re: 'Times' awards names Posted by Marta Layton December 24, 2005 - 7:59:30 Topic ID# 6486
> Message: 2
> Date: Fri, 23 Dec 2005 20:18:02 -0000
> From: "rhapsody_the_bard" <rhapsody74@gmail.com>
> Subject: Re: 'Times' awards names
>
> --- In MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com, "dwimmer_laik" <dwimmer_laik@y...>
> wrote:
>>
>> <snip>
>>> I see your point on this, but I still think we should go with key
>>> events of this period. My reasoning is:
>>>
>>> 1. None of these rings were unique to this period
>>> 2. None of these rings were created in this period
>>> 3. None of these rings were as active as they were in other periods.
>>> For example, the Nine hadn't been abroad in years before the Great
>>> Years.
>>>
>>> It would be interesting, so I'll go with popular opinion on this one.
>>> But I think the different events would work better. At this point I'm
>>> leaning toward:
>>>
>>> 1st: The Death of the White Tree Award
>
> But the White Tree did die before this time period... at least at
> Numenor (Nimloth, who perished in the fires of and I thought earlier
> on as well (if my memory serves me correctly .. And Telperion (thge
> 1st one) was also called The White tree... (who died way before the
> first age), then there is the tree of Tol Eressëa, Celeborn, was
> itself descended from Galathilion, the White Tree that stood in Tirion
> that was made by Yavanna herself (an image of Telperion). Then there
> was the white tree in Minas Ithil... the seedling rescued by Isildur
> (again, he should get his own rescueing seedlings award), which gave
> birth to a couple of white trees that resided in the courtyard of
> Minas Tirith...
>
> So... eum. Here are the White trees I know of (and all died by the
> looks of it)... Telperion -> Gathalion -> Celeborn -> Nimloth ->
> various versions of the White trees of Gondor...
>

Well, given the time frame we're talking about, I think most people
would naturally assume the "White Tree of Gondor". But it's hard for
me to judge what most people would think just because late Third Age
Gondor is my personal obsession. When I was suggesting this award I was
thinking of the following entry from the Tale of Years:

> 2852
> Belecthor II of Gondor dies. The White Tree dies, and no seedling can
> be found. The Dead Tree is left standing.

But other people also have concerns about this award:


>> [Thundera Tiger]
>> Actually, though, I had a slight issue with the award title "Death of
>> the White Tree," too, but for entirely different reasons. It's not a
>> big issue and I certainly live with the award title if everyone else
>> likes it, but...
>>
>> It might just be me, but does anyone else think it odd to have "Death
>> of the White Tree" as an AWARD title? It's kind of a negative thing.
>> And while there are other negative-sounding award titles, they're
>> generally for genres like horror and villains. I guess I'm looking
>> for something a bit more positive. Something...I don't know, like
>> "Calling of the White Council" or something like that. Something with
>> less of a negative spin than the dying White Tree.
>
> [Inkling]
> I've had the same thought myself a few times during these
> discussions...it seems like award titles should be, y'know, uplifting
> and celebratory and all that.

I can certainly see that concern! I guess I was thinking that the White
Tree of Gondor could make some really nice banners, and its withering
and being left there for dead is a symbol for so much else that is
going on, in Gondor and elsewhere.

I don't have a lot of suggestions, either. It would be nice to have an
award that was tied to Gondor or Rohan, since there's a lot going on in
these years, especially in Gondor. "The Building of Henneth Annun"
might work, but it's not what I'd call a major event. "The Rebuilding
of Barad-dur" is definitely positive, but an uplifting thing for the
baddies seems almost as bad as the death of the white tree. There's
"The Emptying of Ithilien", but that's negative, too. And of course
there's the defeat of the Corsairs in (I think?) 2980, but I can't
think of an award title that points specifically to that.

I also considered more personal events. The biggest one that comes to
mind is the trothplighting of Aragorn and Arwen. Obviously a huge
moment in their relationship (which is in its own way politically
important), and definitely uplifting. If we decide to go that way I
think we should reconsider the "Aragorn and Arwen" romance award, but
we can do that later. There are certainly lots of other couples to
choose from.

[Kathy]
> But as I have no alternatives to
> suggest at the moment, I'll just close by saying:
>
> Have a festive and joyous holiday, everyone!
>

You too, and everyone!

Marta


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Msg# 6536

Re: 'Times' awards names Posted by Marta Layton December 24, 2005 - 7:59:30 Topic ID# 6486
> Message: 1
> Date: Fri, 23 Dec 2005 19:04:04 -0000
> From: "dwimmer_laik" <dwimmer_laik@yahoo.com>
> Subject: Re: 'Times' awards names
>
> <snip>
>> I see your point on this, but I still think we should go with key
>> events of this period. My reasoning is:
>>
>> 1. None of these rings were unique to this period
>> 2. None of these rings were created in this period
>> 3. None of these rings were as active as they were in other periods.
>> For example, the Nine hadn't been abroad in years before the Great
>> Years.
>>
>> It would be interesting, so I'll go with popular opinion on this one.
>> But I think the different events would work better. At this point I'm
>> leaning toward:
>>
>> 1st: The Death of the White Tree Award
>> 2nd: The Battle of the Five Armies Award
>> 3rd: The Long-Expected Party Award
>
> Makes sense to me. I was having trouble coming up with things that fit
> together, and the Ring theme was the only one I could come up with.
> Your list gets in a key event of the Quest for Erebor (one could, I
> suppose sub in The Dragon's Downfall for The Battle of Five Armies),
> and two key events, at disparate locations, that will be important for
> the unfolding of the Great Years. Works for me.
>

I don't have a problem changing "The Battle of Five Armies" to anything
else _Hobbit_-related, but I am hesitant to have two _Hobbit_-centric
titles. So for example I'd rather not have "The Calling of the White
Council" and "The Battle of Five Armies", or "The Fall of the Dragon"
and "The Battle of Five Armies".

Incidentally, does anyone know whether Tolkien refers to it as "The
Battle of the Five Armies" or "The Battle of Five Armies"? I'm not
sure, and I'll need to correct the list I'm keeping for my records if
it's the latter.

Thanks,
Marta

Msg# 6537

Re: "Times" Awards and Category names - recap Posted by Marta Layton December 24, 2005 - 8:00:36 Topic ID# 6524
> Message: 4
> Date: Thu, 22 Dec 2005 00:14:40 -0000
> From: "Kathy" <inkling-tcbs@sbcglobal.net>
> Subject: Re: "Times" Awards and Category names - recap
>
> --- In MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com, Marta Layton <melayton@g...> wrote:
>>
>> Just so everyone's on the same page and I'm sure I have it right,
>> here's the categories and awards for the "Times" division. Feel
>> free to nitpick, including missing diacriticals and whatever else.
>> <snip>
>
> What happened to this idea, I kind of liked it:
>
>>> 7. Multi-Age:
>>>
>>> *or*
>>>
>>> 1st: The Andúril Award
>>> 2nd: The Orcrist and Glamdring Award
>>> 3rd: The Sting Award
>>>

This is exactly why I wanted to run the list by the group; I knew I'd
forget about something. ;-)

Though I slightly prefer the characters idea to the sword, I'm really
fine with either of these ideas. So I'll go with whatever the majority
want.

I'll set up a poll when I get back to the States. If someone wants to
send me an email next weekend reminding me, it wouldn't be a bad idea.

Thanks,
Marta

Msg# 6538

Re: 'Times' awards names Posted by Laura December 24, 2005 - 19:10:25 Topic ID# 6486
-- Marta Layton <melayton@gmail.com> wrote:
>> I don't have a problem changing "The Battle of Five Armies" to
>> anything else _Hobbit_-related, but I am hesitant to have two
>> _Hobbit_-centric titles. So for example I'd rather not have "The
>> Calling of the White Council" and "The Battle of Five Armies",
>> or "The Fall of the Dragon" and "The Battle of Five Armies".

Personally, I like the Five Armies idea. Not sure how one might create a banner from it, but I still like it. But in defense of the White Council idea (if it's something people are interested in), the White Council was formed back in 2463, almost 500 years before any events from "The Hobbit" took place, and it's last meeting was in 2953. So it's really not "Hobbit" related and the White Council itself spans most of the Late Third Age, which is the category it would fall under. Still just a thought, but the more I consider it, the more I like it as an award option.

Of course, you're still missing a tie-in with Gondor, but there's the rebuilding of the White Tower, the renaming of Minas Tirith, Henneth Annun, etc. You could go with any of those, too. But I wonder if we shouldn't try to hit something earlier in Late Third Age, because both Bilbo's farewell feast and the Quest for Erebor happen toward the end, so you're missing the early years of the Late Third Age. Just my opinion.

>> Incidentally, does anyone know whether Tolkien refers to it as "The
>> Battle of the Five Armies" or "The Battle of Five Armies"? I'm not
>> sure, and I'll need to correct the list I'm keeping for my records
>> if it's the latter.

The Tale of Years has it as "The Battle of THE Five Armies," without the allcaps, of course.

And a Happy Holidays to everybody celebrating!

Thundera

-----------------------------------------------
--Okay, I'll make a deal with you: If we go out
on patrol and Gotham is quiet with no sign of
the Joker, we come back here, have Christmas
dinner, and watch ýItýs a Wonderful Life.ý
--You know, Iýve never seen that. I could never
get past the title.

Robin and Batman - Batman: The Animated Series
------------------------------------------------

Msg# 6539

Re: 'Times' awards names Posted by Laura December 24, 2005 - 19:13:40 Topic ID# 6486
>> Incidentally, does anyone know whether Tolkien refers to it as "The
>> Battle of the Five Armies" or "The Battle of Five Armies"? I'm not
>> sure, and I'll need to correct the list I'm keeping for my records
>> if it's the latter.

Ooo, here's something I didn't catch before sending out my last email. In "The Hobbit" itself, the battle is called "The Battle of Five Armies." But the Tale of Years definitely has "The Battle of the Five Armies." So we could probably go either way on this. Who do we trust? Bilbo or the Tale of Years?

Thundera (Still wishing all a Happy Holidays)


-----------------------------------------------
--Okay, I'll make a deal with you: If we go out
on patrol and Gotham is quiet with no sign of
the Joker, we come back here, have Christmas
dinner, and watch ýItýs a Wonderful Life.ý
--You know, Iýve never seen that. I could never
get past the title.

Robin and Batman - Batman: The Animated Series
-----------------------------------------------

Msg# 6540

Speaking of award names... Posted by BLJean@aol.com December 25, 2005 - 0:40:28 Topic ID# 6540
How can I find out what the award names/banners are for my stories? They're
still showing in the database as "places" only. Or at least they were the last
time I checked, a week or two ago.

Are there award names for author awards, or just story awards?

Thanks,
Lindelea


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Msg# 6541

Re: Speaking of award names... Posted by elliska67 December 26, 2005 - 16:38:27 Topic ID# 6540
I'm not sure this answers your question but...

If you mean the names of the awards that you won in the 2005 MEFAs,
it seems that they are:

Stories:
The J.R.R. Tolkien Award for Honorable Mention for Birthday Present

The Master of Buckland Award (2nd Place) for The Courtship of
Samwise Gamgee

The J.R.R. Tolkien Award for Honorable Mention for Truth

The Van Helsing Award (2nd Place) for The Council of Elrond

The Battle of the Pelennor Fields Award (2nd Place)for Shire:
Beginnings

The Legolas, Lord of Ithilien Award (2nd Place) for Tales of Old
Wives

Author Awards:
Adventure The J.R.R. Tolkien Award for Honorable Mention
Crossover Poetry The Troy Award
Horror The J.R.R. Tolkien Award for Honorable Mention
Mystery The Palantiri Award
Gondor Poetry The J.R.R. Tolkien Award for Honorable Mention
Hobbits The J.R.R. Tolkien Award for Honorable Mention
Hobbits Poetry The Master of Buckland Award
Men The Faithful of Numenor Award

I found that info by going to:

http://home.earthlink.net/~ainae/mefa/2005swin.html

and searching for your user name. If you want to get the associated
banners for your awards, go to http://home.earthlink.net/~ainae/mefa/
and click on the appropriate categories under "Authors pick up your
banners here."

I hope that helps. If not, let us know. :-)



--- In MEFAwards@yahoogroups.com, BLJean@a... wrote:
>
> How can I find out what the award names/banners are for my
stories? They're
> still showing in the database as "places" only. Or at least they
were the last
> time I checked, a week or two ago.
>
> Are there award names for author awards, or just story awards?
>
> Thanks,
> Lindelea
>
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>

Msg# 6542

Re: "flame" review... but not really - sorry so late! Posted by chathollinn@comcast.net December 28, 2005 - 18:27:57 Topic ID# 5941
Hello. It has been a while since I saw this discussion. Are we still talking about flames, or is it most any review that is not complimentary, or constructive, or what? Regards - Chathol-linn


-------------- Original message ----------------------
From: Naresha <north_shore_fruitcake@yahoo.com.au>


Okay... firstly, I know this is once again
EXCEPTIONALLY late. I won't go into why, but in
a nutshell... Pre-Christmas and Christmas time
is HELL for events! You go from working nights
and sleeping days to just plain WORKING! Add to
that studying two nights a week... You get the
idea! ANYWAY!

> I agree - it does seem counter-productive to
leave a review
> for a piece that you didn't really enjoy. The
competition was > pretty fierce in some of the
sub-cats, and a single point or
> in some cases even a few characters really
could make a
> difference.

For me, it wasn't a case of win or lose - it was
one of only three reviews I got total, but as you
said - counter-productive to the max!

> Do you have any suggestions for how we handle
something like
> this? If we remove the review then the author
doesn't get
> those points, and if they've already seen the
review more than > likely so we're just harming
the author further.

I suggest that perhaps the author is given the
ability to screen their own reviews if they come
across something like this. I personally don't
have issue with others seeing this, but I am sure
some people will. Also, I think perhaps we
should have some way that people can report what
they feel to be a "flame" review and that person
can be investigated by MEFA people - we had MORE
than enough volunteers this year, I'm sure
someone would relish the job of checking on
possible flames! And given this appears to be
the only one, it doesn't seem like it would be
all that time-consuming!

> My guy says we should do what we can to
discourage this type
> of review - but if one's made, leave it alone.

That's all well and good, but there isn't much
point in saying "This is bad" and then not acting
on it when it happens. It's like any rule that
is based around bad behaviour - if you're not
going to enforce it, don't bother having it!
Especially with something like flaming, it is a
very sensitive, very personal issue and it can
severely impact on the person it is directed at.
It is something that needs to be dealt with, not
just talked about and left alone.

> I don't mind it being discussed. It could cause
problems, I'm > just not sure how to fix it,
short of maybe screening all the > comments.
That's not *completely* out of the question, but
it > would be very work-intensive, and it would
mean we'd have to
> make a lot more judgement calls - something I'd
rather avoid
> if possible.

Like I said above, I think perhaps some sort of
system where it is possible to either remove
and/or hide the review. Also, I think that the
threat of banning those who leave a flame review
may help deter it from happening. But we also
need to be open to discourse between any authors
and any reviewers that they feel have flamed
them.

Resha,



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Msg# 6543

Re: Speaking of award names... Posted by Marta Layton December 28, 2005 - 21:38:42 Topic ID# 6540
> Message: 7
> Date: Sun, 25 Dec 2005 01:39:08 EST
> From: BLJean@aol.com
> Subject: Speaking of award names...
>
> How can I find out what the award names/banners are for my stories?
> They're
> still showing in the database as "places" only. Or at least they were
> the last
> time I checked, a week or two ago.
>
> Are there award names for author awards, or just story awards?
>
> Thanks,
> Lindelea
>

Hi Lindelea,

If you go to http://home.earthlink.net/~ainae/mefa/ , there should be a
link that says the name of the different prizes for each category.
Also, if you log in to the site where you voted, there is a link to see
the winners, and the award names should be listed with that
information.

I'm writing this while I'm offline. When I have an internet connection,
I'll find the exact link at http://home.earthlink.net/~ainae/mefa/ and
post it here.

As for the author awards, they have the same name as the story awards.
For example, the awards for "Lord of the Rings" are:

1st: The Fellowship of the Rings
2nd: The Two Towers
3rd: The Return of the King Award.

So a story that wins 2nd place in some LOTR sub-category gets "The Two
Towers" award. And an author who wins 2nd place on the LOTR : Drabble
Authors subcategory (i.e., gets the second most points for author
reviews of all those authors who wrote drabbles in the LOTR category)
will also get a "Two Towers" award.

Open up http://home.earthlink.net/~ainae/mefa/ . There should be a link
to the awards banners for 2005. Click on the appropriate link (they are
organised by authors and story banners, with the different categories
having their banners on different pages - divided alphabetically by the
category name). You'll see that each subcategory has its own banners.
The basic design will be the same, but somewhere on there there will be
the name of the subcategory. Download the banner for your subcategory
and use it as you see fit.

Thanks,
Marta

Msg# 6544

Re: Digest Number 598 Posted by Marta Layton December 28, 2005 - 21:38:42 Topic ID# 6544
> Message: 6
> Date: Sun, 25 Dec 2005 01:11:43 GMT
> From: "Laura" <thunderalaura@juno.com>
> Subject: Re: Re: 'Times' awards names
>
>>> Incidentally, does anyone know whether Tolkien refers to it as "The
>>> Battle of the Five Armies" or "The Battle of Five Armies"? I'm not
>>> sure, and I'll need to correct the list I'm keeping for my records
>>> if it's the latter.
>
> Ooo, here's something I didn't catch before sending out my last email.
> In "The Hobbit" itself, the battle is called "The Battle of Five
> Armies." But the Tale of Years definitely has "The Battle of the Five
> Armies." So we could probably go either way on this. Who do we trust?
> Bilbo or the Tale of Years?
>
> Thundera (Still wishing all a Happy Holidays)
>

Ooh, good catch.

I'm going to make a bit of an executive decision on this. LOTR was
published later, so where the two conflict I think that makes LOTR the
ultimate authority of the two. So for the purpose of these awards, the
award name will be "The Battle of the Five Armies Award".

However, if someone makes a mistake and a banner doesn't have "the",
we'll accept it. It's just that the official name will be "The Battle
of the Five Armies Award".

Marta

Msg# 6545

Re: 'Times' awards names Posted by Marta Layton December 28, 2005 - 21:38:47 Topic ID# 6486
>

Hi Laura,

> Message: 5
> Date: Sun, 25 Dec 2005 01:07:36 GMT
> From: "Laura" <thunderalaura@juno.com>
> Subject: Re: Re: 'Times' awards names
>
> -- Marta Layton <melayton@gmail.com> wrote:
>>> I don't have a problem changing "The Battle of Five Armies" to
>>> anything else _Hobbit_-related, but I am hesitant to have two
>>> _Hobbit_-centric titles. So for example I'd rather not have "The
>>> Calling of the White Council" and "The Battle of Five Armies",
>>> or "The Fall of the Dragon" and "The Battle of Five Armies".
>
> Personally, I like the Five Armies idea. Not sure how one might create
> a banner from it, but I still like it.

I'm always so impressed with how creative our banner-makers are. I'm
sure if there's a way to do it, they'll find it. :-) It may be
text-based rather than graphical, but I'm sure we'll be pleasantly
surprised.

> But in defense of the White Council idea (if it's something people
> are interested in), the White Council was formed back in 2463, almost
> 500 years before any events from "The Hobbit" took place, and it's
> last meeting was in 2953. So it's really not "Hobbit" related and the
> White Council itself spans most of the Late Third Age, which is the
> category it would fall under. Still just a thought, but the more I
> consider it, the more I like it as an award option.
>

That's a good point. I think in terms of the different books it's only
really mentioned in "The Hobbit" - though of course the appendices
establish it as running all along. So it's an option, probably a good
one.

> Of course, you're still missing a tie-in with Gondor, but there's the
> rebuilding of the White Tower, the renaming of Minas Tirith, Henneth
> Annun, etc. You could go with any of those, too. But I wonder if we
> shouldn't try to hit something earlier in Late Third Age, because both
> Bilbo's farewell feast and the Quest for Erebor happen toward the end,
> so you're missing the early years of the Late Third Age. Just my
> opinion.
>

I would like something earlier. That's why I suggested the White Tree
thing - the last white tree of Gondor died very early in the time
period, I think 2852 (I'm going from memory here).

How about this? I'll set up a poll with the following options:

The White Council Award
The Building of Henneth Annun Award
The Desertion of Ithilien Award
The Rebuilding of Barad-dur Award
The Death of the White Tree of Gondor Award
The Destruction of the Corsair Fleet Award
The Betrothal of Aragorn and Arwen Award

Whichever one of these gets the most votes will be the third options.

>>> Incidentally, does anyone know whether Tolkien refers to it as "The
>>> Battle of the Five Armies" or "The Battle of Five Armies"? I'm not
>>> sure, and I'll need to correct the list I'm keeping for my records
>>> if it's the latter.
>
> The Tale of Years has it as "The Battle of THE Five Armies," without
> the allcaps, of course.
>

Thanks! Will make an appropriate note on my list...

Marta

Msg# 6546

Re: "flame" review... but not really - sorry so late! Posted by Marta Layton December 29, 2005 - 23:16:58 Topic ID# 5941
> Message: 1
> Date: Thu, 29 Dec 2005 00:17:52 +0000
> From: chathollinn@comcast.net
> Subject: Re: "flame" review... but not really - sorry so late!
>
> Hello. It has been a while since I saw this discussion. Are we still
> talking about flames, or is it most any review that is not
> complimentary, or constructive, or what? Regards - Chathol-linn
>

I think we're actually talking about flames here. I certainly don't
want to knock out all constructive comments, as those were my
favourites to receive and being able to talk about them really allowed
me to delve into things for the longer reviews.

I can't find the email (I do save these), but I think we decided to
handle these on a case-by-case basis. If you notice what you consider
an abusive review during the competition, especially if it's for your
story, let the admins know and we'll handle it.

thanks,
Marta