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Anchorhead said:skyjedi2005 said:books that have no topical allegory whatsoever....like Tolkien's lord of the rings.
Lord Of The Rings is one of the most famous pieces of allegorical fiction there is.
I've read before where Tolkien claimed to hate allegory - he was either deluded, or a hypocrite. Lord Of The Rings is a thinly-veiled allegorical piece about how the industrial revolution destroyed bucolic England. It's almost nothing but allegory. Arguably, it's know as much for it's message as it is for it's story.
I find that a rather bizarre interpretation of Tolkien's work. Just because he had concerns and they might have influenced his work doesn't mean he consciously created his work just to bear a message. He was way more into the story than that. He was into stories and art for their own sake and their human value, which is why he despised allegory, which debases such things for the sake of a message. Allegory isn't just when something has a bit of subtext. It's when the subtext is all the work is about.
And it's pointless to talk of unconsciously created allegory. Allegory is when the author deliberately sets out to create such a thing, not when they unconsciously lend a lot of subtext to their work