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Culture War Roundup for the week of December 2, 2024

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but frankly I don’t think it has much to teach us about the real world

I've heard it said that it offers a surprisingly realistic description of what it's like to be a regular soldier in an extended war. Not the big fantasy battles with Gondor and Rohan, but the endless march of Frodo and Sam. Every day they're cold, hungry, and tired. They very rarely fight, mostly they just try to avoid the enemy. They are of course terrified of the enemy, which has magical powers that could kill them at any moment, but their more immediate concern from day to day is just getting enough food and finding the strength to keep marching. "All Quiet on the Western Front" had a similar feel to it.

Not the big fantasy battles with Gondor and Rohan

and these were also quite good representations (before someone will complain about Nazgûl" morale is actually important in real world).

https://acoup.blog/2019/05/10/collections-the-siege-of-gondor/ is the best that ACOUP produced and has quite good analysis of that

I'm also a fan of ACOUP, but I feel like he's talking about something very different there. The siege of gondor is written from the perspective of high-level commanders, with a god's eye view of the battlefield and full intel. Even today, there's very few generals who would have that level of intelligence and control over an active battle. The "fog of war" is very real, and Tolkien would have known that since he was just a regular lieutenant in the trenches leading enlisted men. Admittedly he didn't last there long before getting disabled by trench fever.