Tolkien on Writing as Sub-Creation
» S.D. Smith
“What really happens is that the story-maker proves a successful ’sub-creator’. He makes a Secondary World which your mind can enter. Inside it, what he relates is ‘true’: it accords with the laws of that world. You therefore believe it, while you are, as it were, inside. The moment disbelief arises, the spell is broken; the magic, or rather art, has failed. You are then out in the Primary World again, looking at the little abortive Secondary World from outside.”“Every writer making a secondary world wishes in some measure to be a real maker, or hopes that he is drawing on reality: hopes that the peculiar quality of this secondary world (if not all the details) are derived from Reality, or are flowing into it.”
-John Ronald Reuel Tolkien
February 13th, 2012 at 3:00 am
[...] Catholic, and he understood his writing not as escapism, but as an act of what he called “sub-creation,” itself an act of praise for the one Creator.I’ve been thinking about this recently [...]