
Sobre los Cuentos de Hadas
4.32
4,846 valoraciones·250 reseñas
El ensayo Sobre los Cuentos de Hadas de J.R.R. Tolkien es su obra más estudiada y citada, una declaración personal ejemplar sobre el papel de la imaginación en la literatura y una obra intelectual crucial para comprender su logro al escribir El Señor de los Anillos. Incluye una introducción a la con...
- páginas
- 320
- Format
- Hardcover
- Publicado
- 2008-07-01
- Editorial
- HarperCollins
- ISBN
- 9780007244669
Sobre el autor

J.R.R. Tolkien
2026 libros · 0 seguidores
John Ronald Reuel Tolkien: writer, artist, scholar, linguist. Known to millions around the world as the author ofThe Lord of the Rings, Tolkien spent most of his life teaching at the University of Oxford where he was a distinguished academic in the fields of Old and Middle English and Old Norse. His creativity, confine...
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Calificación y Reseña
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Reseñas de la comunidad
250 reseñas4.3
4,846 valoraciones
5
45%
4
30%
3
15%
2
7%
1
3%
Neil·1 years ago
The original essay continues to be absolutely brilliant every time I read it. Tolkien applied clear thinking that makes his critique and proposals resonate decades later—in fact, some of his points feel more relevant now. I would like to ask him about his views on theater, as that's the one moment in the essay when I feel a disconnect. Tolkien clearly did not have a high regard for theater (or at least, for fantasy and fairy-story presented in live theater), and I wonder what he had seen in that...
Lamija·3 years ago
Loved it! I'm pleased to remark that our class readings for this semester are surprisingly interesting and enjoyable. This is something I would choose to read in my free time as well. Although I've never read Tolkien (just not my cup of tea), I found his musings on fairy tales very captivating and thought-provoking.
J. Wootton·3 years ago
It's hard to imagine a more thorough and accessible critical treatment of a single work than Flieger & Anderson put together here. There are not many short works so robust as Tolkien's original essay as to deserve a book-length treatment, and few of those have authors so popular that a mainstream publisher would take on the commercial risk of supporting such a book.Having grown up reading an oddly truncated (and partly incomprehensible) early draft version of the essay misprinted in an ancie...
Hon Lady Selene·4 years ago
“The Recovered Thing is not quite the same as the Thing-never-lost. It is often more precious. As Grace, recovered by repentance, is not the same as primitive Innocence, but is not necessarily a poorer or worse state.”
Joellen·4 years ago
Well, this the first time I can say that an academic essay has made me cry. As Tolkien would say, it has whet my desire.
(Floats away dreamily into a fantasy world)
(Floats away dreamily into a fantasy world)
Catherine⁷·5 years ago
I read this for my Tolkien University class. That class was so much fun and I will never forget it.
Nikola Pavlovic·5 years ago
Vidis li onaj uzan puteljak
Sto uz planinu vjuga tamo
To je put u carstvo vila majusnih
kud ti i ja nocas tumaramo <3
Sto uz planinu vjuga tamo
To je put u carstvo vila majusnih
kud ti i ja nocas tumaramo <3
Alex Boyd·10 years ago
This is a really dense essay, and Tolkien has a habit of following intellectual rabbit trails. If you don't mind taking a long time to read a short piece, it is definitely worth the effort. He discusses not only the history, purpose and misconceptions of fairy tales, he also discusses with great passion and importance how they relate to the nature and soul of man.
Brian ·11 years ago
Tolkien first defines “Faerie” as a place, and a type of story. According to him, fairies are not required, but a belief in the other world typifies “Faerie.” This belief is not a mock-reality, of what he calls our “Primary Reality,” but a secondary reality, just as real. This is not a place to make-believe, but to truly believe, and here you find the reason children are more apt to like these stories. Children trust, and believe, without the complication of big words and deeper meanings to hide...
Caroline·13 years ago
A must read for anyone who loves fairy stories or tales of enchantment. An essay on the craftsmanship, delights and misapprehensions we have about tales in this genre. I particularly liked his evocation and description of 'eucatastrophe'.But the “consolation” of fairy-tales has another aspect than the imaginative satisfaction of ancient desires. Far more important is the Consolation of the Happy Ending. Almost I would venture to assert that all complete fairy-stories must have it. At least I wou...