Tolkien and the Inklings: Men of the West
The Inklings were, to be sure, the most important literary group of the twentieth-century, rivaling and surpassing the much touted Bloomsbury Group.  They influenced not just the direction of literature—especially through fantasy, science fiction, and biography—but the very direction of western civilization itself.  It would not be too much of an exaggeration to note that former Communist countries rebelled using the language of the Inklings, but that the free west—from the United Kingdom to Italy to the United States—has been deeply influenced by the group as well. Though much has been written about the Inklings, almost all Inklings scholarship has revolved around the truly brilliant figure of C.S. Lewis.  While Lewis was critical to the formation and maintenance of the group, he was not alone.  In particular, J.R.R. Tolkien’s larger mythology, out of which The Hobbit, The Lord of the Rings, and The Silmarillion arose, informed the group, as did Owen Barfield’s path-breaking senior thesis at Oxford, Poetic Diction. As such, this book focuses on the Inklings from Tolkien’s point of view.  As with Lewis, Barfield, Charles Williams, and Lord David Cecil, Tolkien wanted the group to serve as a bardic defense of western civilization, Socrates through Dante.  Having fought in the trenches of World War I, the Inklings were more than aware of the fragility of civilization.  They witnessed not just the first world war, but the rise of fascism, national socialism, and communism, as well as sent their sons off to fight World War II.  Perhaps, just perhaps, myth and legend might reawaken the West to what it could be and to what it once aspired.The Inklings were, to be sure, the most important literary group of the twentieth-century, rivaling and surpassing the much touted Bloomsbury Group.  They influenced not just the direction of literature—especially through fantasy, science fiction, and biography—but the very direction of western civilization itself.  It would not be too much of an exaggeration to note that former Communist countries rebelled using the language of the Inklings, but that the free west—from the United Kingdom to Italy to the United States—has been deeply influenced by the group as well. Though much has been written about the Inklings, almost all Inklings scholarship has revolved around the truly brilliant figure of C.S. Lewis.  While Lewis was critical to the formation and maintenance of the group, he was not alone.  In particular, J.R.R. Tolkien’s larger mythology, out of which The Hobbit, The Lord of the Rings, and The Silmarillion arose, informed the group, as did Owen Barfield’s path-breaking senior thesis at Oxford, Poetic Diction. As such, this book focuses on the Inklings from Tolkien’s point of view.  As with Lewis, Barfield, Charles Williams, and Lord David Cecil, Tolkien wanted the group to serve as a bardic defense of western civilization, Socrates through Dante.  Having fought in the trenches of World War I, the Inklings were more than aware of the fragility of civilization.  They witnessed not just the first world war, but the rise of fascism, national socialism, and communism, as well as sent their sons off to fight World War II.  Perhaps, just perhaps, myth and legend might reawaken the West to what it could be and to what it once aspired.
1147878292
Tolkien and the Inklings: Men of the West
The Inklings were, to be sure, the most important literary group of the twentieth-century, rivaling and surpassing the much touted Bloomsbury Group.  They influenced not just the direction of literature—especially through fantasy, science fiction, and biography—but the very direction of western civilization itself.  It would not be too much of an exaggeration to note that former Communist countries rebelled using the language of the Inklings, but that the free west—from the United Kingdom to Italy to the United States—has been deeply influenced by the group as well. Though much has been written about the Inklings, almost all Inklings scholarship has revolved around the truly brilliant figure of C.S. Lewis.  While Lewis was critical to the formation and maintenance of the group, he was not alone.  In particular, J.R.R. Tolkien’s larger mythology, out of which The Hobbit, The Lord of the Rings, and The Silmarillion arose, informed the group, as did Owen Barfield’s path-breaking senior thesis at Oxford, Poetic Diction. As such, this book focuses on the Inklings from Tolkien’s point of view.  As with Lewis, Barfield, Charles Williams, and Lord David Cecil, Tolkien wanted the group to serve as a bardic defense of western civilization, Socrates through Dante.  Having fought in the trenches of World War I, the Inklings were more than aware of the fragility of civilization.  They witnessed not just the first world war, but the rise of fascism, national socialism, and communism, as well as sent their sons off to fight World War II.  Perhaps, just perhaps, myth and legend might reawaken the West to what it could be and to what it once aspired.The Inklings were, to be sure, the most important literary group of the twentieth-century, rivaling and surpassing the much touted Bloomsbury Group.  They influenced not just the direction of literature—especially through fantasy, science fiction, and biography—but the very direction of western civilization itself.  It would not be too much of an exaggeration to note that former Communist countries rebelled using the language of the Inklings, but that the free west—from the United Kingdom to Italy to the United States—has been deeply influenced by the group as well. Though much has been written about the Inklings, almost all Inklings scholarship has revolved around the truly brilliant figure of C.S. Lewis.  While Lewis was critical to the formation and maintenance of the group, he was not alone.  In particular, J.R.R. Tolkien’s larger mythology, out of which The Hobbit, The Lord of the Rings, and The Silmarillion arose, informed the group, as did Owen Barfield’s path-breaking senior thesis at Oxford, Poetic Diction. As such, this book focuses on the Inklings from Tolkien’s point of view.  As with Lewis, Barfield, Charles Williams, and Lord David Cecil, Tolkien wanted the group to serve as a bardic defense of western civilization, Socrates through Dante.  Having fought in the trenches of World War I, the Inklings were more than aware of the fragility of civilization.  They witnessed not just the first world war, but the rise of fascism, national socialism, and communism, as well as sent their sons off to fight World War II.  Perhaps, just perhaps, myth and legend might reawaken the West to what it could be and to what it once aspired.
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Tolkien and the Inklings: Men of the West

Tolkien and the Inklings: Men of the West

by Bradley J. Birzer
Tolkien and the Inklings: Men of the West

Tolkien and the Inklings: Men of the West

by Bradley J. Birzer

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Overview

The Inklings were, to be sure, the most important literary group of the twentieth-century, rivaling and surpassing the much touted Bloomsbury Group.  They influenced not just the direction of literature—especially through fantasy, science fiction, and biography—but the very direction of western civilization itself.  It would not be too much of an exaggeration to note that former Communist countries rebelled using the language of the Inklings, but that the free west—from the United Kingdom to Italy to the United States—has been deeply influenced by the group as well. Though much has been written about the Inklings, almost all Inklings scholarship has revolved around the truly brilliant figure of C.S. Lewis.  While Lewis was critical to the formation and maintenance of the group, he was not alone.  In particular, J.R.R. Tolkien’s larger mythology, out of which The Hobbit, The Lord of the Rings, and The Silmarillion arose, informed the group, as did Owen Barfield’s path-breaking senior thesis at Oxford, Poetic Diction. As such, this book focuses on the Inklings from Tolkien’s point of view.  As with Lewis, Barfield, Charles Williams, and Lord David Cecil, Tolkien wanted the group to serve as a bardic defense of western civilization, Socrates through Dante.  Having fought in the trenches of World War I, the Inklings were more than aware of the fragility of civilization.  They witnessed not just the first world war, but the rise of fascism, national socialism, and communism, as well as sent their sons off to fight World War II.  Perhaps, just perhaps, myth and legend might reawaken the West to what it could be and to what it once aspired.The Inklings were, to be sure, the most important literary group of the twentieth-century, rivaling and surpassing the much touted Bloomsbury Group.  They influenced not just the direction of literature—especially through fantasy, science fiction, and biography—but the very direction of western civilization itself.  It would not be too much of an exaggeration to note that former Communist countries rebelled using the language of the Inklings, but that the free west—from the United Kingdom to Italy to the United States—has been deeply influenced by the group as well. Though much has been written about the Inklings, almost all Inklings scholarship has revolved around the truly brilliant figure of C.S. Lewis.  While Lewis was critical to the formation and maintenance of the group, he was not alone.  In particular, J.R.R. Tolkien’s larger mythology, out of which The Hobbit, The Lord of the Rings, and The Silmarillion arose, informed the group, as did Owen Barfield’s path-breaking senior thesis at Oxford, Poetic Diction. As such, this book focuses on the Inklings from Tolkien’s point of view.  As with Lewis, Barfield, Charles Williams, and Lord David Cecil, Tolkien wanted the group to serve as a bardic defense of western civilization, Socrates through Dante.  Having fought in the trenches of World War I, the Inklings were more than aware of the fragility of civilization.  They witnessed not just the first world war, but the rise of fascism, national socialism, and communism, as well as sent their sons off to fight World War II.  Perhaps, just perhaps, myth and legend might reawaken the West to what it could be and to what it once aspired.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781641774666
Publisher: Encounter Books
Publication date: 04/14/2026
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 496

About the Author

Bradley Joseph Francis Birzer is the Russell Amos Kirk Chair in American Studies and Professor of History, Hillsdale College.  Co-founder of and Senior Contributor to The Imaginative Conservative, Birzer is the author of nine books, including the award-winning, Russell Kirk: American Conservative, favorably reviewed by The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, and The Los Angeles Times.  His other books include J.R.R. Tolkien’s Sanctifying Myth: Understanding Middle-earth; Sanctifying the World: The Augustinian Life and Mind of Christopher Dawson; American Cicero: The Life of Charles Carroll of Carrollton; Neil Peart: Cultural Repercussions; In Defense of Andrew Jackson; Beyond Tenebrae: Christian Humanism in the Twilight of the West; and Mythic Realms: The Moral Imagination in Literature and Film.  Currently, he is working on an intellectual biography of sociologist Robert Nisbet, a book examining Ray Bradbury’s imagination, as well as a 250th anniversary history of the Declaration of Independence.  He and his wife, Dedra (also an academic and editor), have seven children, four cats, and one dog.  They divide their time between Michigan and South Dakota.Bradley Joseph Francis Birzer is the Russell Amos Kirk Chair in American Studies and Professor of History, Hillsdale College.  Co-founder of and Senior Contributor to The Imaginative Conservative, Birzer is the author of nine books, including the award-winning, Russell Kirk: American Conservative, favorably reviewed by The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, and The Los Angeles Times.  His other books include J.R.R. Tolkien’s Sanctifying Myth: Understanding Middle-earth; Sanctifying the World: The Augustinian Life and Mind of Christopher Dawson; American Cicero: The Life of Charles Carroll of Carrollton; Neil Peart: Cultural Repercussions; In Defense of Andrew Jackson; Beyond Tenebrae: Christian Humanism in the Twilight of the West; and Mythic Realms: The Moral Imagination in Literature and Film.  Currently, he is working on an intellectual biography of sociologist Robert Nisbet, a book examining Ray Bradbury’s imagination, as well as a 250th anniversary history of the Declaration of Independence.  He and his wife, Dedra (also an academic and editor), have seven children, four cats, and one dog.  They divide their time between Michigan and South Dakota.
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