Teaching Through Tolkien: The Astronomy of Middle-earth [Poster presented at Cosmos in the Classroom, July 2004]

Dr. Kristine Larsen
Professor of Physics and Astronomy
Central Connecticut State University
 

Tolkien and Astronomy?!?!?!?!?!

“Speaking for myself as a child, I can only say that a liking for fairy-stories was not a dominant characteristic of early taste…. I liked many other things as well or better: such as history, astronomy….”-- J.R.R.T, “On Fairy-Stories”

“So deep was the impression made by astronomy on me that I do not think I could deal with or imaginatively conceive a flat world, though a world of static earth with a sun going round it seems easy (to fancy if not to reason).”
-- J.R.R.T., Letter to Naomi Mitchison

Tolkien acted as a “Sub-creator”, in that he made a “secondary world which your mind can enter.” The reader believes in the world while inside it because of its self-consistency -- its “reality.” Part of that “creation” involved the astronomy of Middle-earth.

During his early years as a professor at the University of Leeds he utilized interdisciplinary and unconventional teaching methods, such as Anglo-Saxon crossword puzzles. It is therefore fitting that we take advantage of the depth and breadth of Tolkien’s “sub-creation” in the interdisciplinary teaching of astronomy to non-science majors.
 

What is “Teaching through Tolkien”?

Using literary references from Tolkien’s work as the springboard for class discussion or the backbone of a lab exercise

Examples of astronomical concepts that can be “Taught through Tolkien”
 


Examples of Lab exercises: