One Ring to Bring Them Both and in the Darkness Bind Them: The Shire as Frodo Baggins’s Topographical Equivalent

Authors

  • Margarita Maira Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.7764/ESLA.61875

Keywords:

THE LORD OF THE RINGS, FRODO, THE SHIRE, DOPPELGANGER, TOPOGRAPHICAL EQUIVALENT

Abstract

This paper deals with the problem of identity and place in J. R. R. Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings. It attempts to show that the main character’s connection with his homeland is deeper yet than what is usually perceived. When comparing Frodo’s journey and the Shire’s development throughout the novel it is possible to see many coincidences in their paths. As a result, we may state that the Shire mirrors Frodo’s evolution. This curious discovery prompted the creation of the term “topographical equivalent” to describe their unique relationship. This, in turn, affects the hero’s journey, for when he reaches the Shire’s doppleganger, the land of Mordor, he is also facing his own. This encounter not only affects Frodo as a near death experience. It results in a painful extension of consciousness too, since the world is capable of containing an evil so opposite to his and his homeland’s natures. A change is produced from a local conception of place to a broader one of space. Both these traumatic events alter the hero. Furthermore, these consequences become quite revealing when trying to decipher Frodo’s strange relationship and final abandonment of the Shire after the Quest of the Ring is over.

Author Biography

Margarita Maira, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile

Margarita Maira, Bachelor in English Literature and Linguistics PUC, has been TA for several professors in many of the faculty‟s literature courses. She was co-author and proofreader of Santillana‟s English textbook for 3ro Medio, 2012. She has been offered a place to study an M.A. on 19th Century Literature and Culture at the University of York, UK. She is currently co-general editor of the academic journal White Rabbit: English Studies in Latin America.

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Published

2023-06-22

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Section

ARTICLES