Saturday, July 2, 2011

Tonight's Forecast: Partly atmospheric with a chance of symbolism

Weather may seem like an insignificant and aggravating occurrence to those of us in the real world; however, in literature, weather means a great deal more. Weather can add atmospherics, create irony, become a plot device, expose symbolism, anything the author wants to graft into their work. Using weather can create haunting, foreboding atmospheres in literature, deep impacting moods and themes that set the stage for later events and establish the tone for the story. Some of the best examples of weather setting the mood (no not like that) occur in J.R.R. Tolkien's Lord of the Rings trilogy. Tolkien was a master of moods and atmosphere, evident throughout his works and the examples I will look at here.

At the beginning of the Fellowship's journey in The Fellowship of the Ring, the company are travelling from Rivendell to Mordor when their journey hits a snag. What starts as clouds appearing overhead turns into a full-blown blizzard as the company reaches the mountain pass in Caradhras, quickly making even the stoutest member begin to question the journey. With the blizzard raging, the company takes shelter and plans their next move: continue on this path through Caradhras and the blizzard or take another route via the Mines of Moria. The company is divided over which path to take. Cold, tired, miserable, the company knows the storm is the work of Sauron, but can't do anything about it. The entire situation, driven by the weather, feels hopeless and sets a foreboding haze over the story: if this is what the company go through hundreds of miles away from their destination, what will happen when they are there? This encounter with the weather partially shows the struggle of humanity, of trying to do a good act, but the way that you need to travel is blocked off, forcing you to pursue the goal from a different angle, learning more from the experience and growing stronger than if the original plan had followed through.

The weather also shows humanities struggles with outside forces and the universe itself, symbolized fairly well in the Battle of Helm's Deep in The Two Towers. After undergoing great struggle to reach the fortress, the remainder of the company and Rohan's small force of troops are weary, disheartened, and aching with a sense of foreboding, partially due to the "heaviness of the air" and the area being "hot for the season of the year...with a growing darkness...[like] a storm coming from the East. That weather description made me a little disheartened just reading it. Imagine the effect that this type of weather would have on a battle-weary group trying to protect their loved ones from a force consisting of the universes mutations that has no other purpose than to destroy them. The universe not only doesn't care about the group, it also helped to create the force pursuing them, heightening the irony in the situation. Not only is the universe and its underlings trying to destroy me, but it will set the mood for my destruction before-hand.

And to think, all of this can be accomplished by what we watch in the mornings to see if we will need a jacket or not.

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