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Tuesday, August 27, 2024

Anti-Fascism and the Fall of Atlanticist Liberalism

Monday 26 August 2024, by Gilbert Achcar
Stalinism thus turned from a twin of Nazism in their common affiliation with totalitarianism, the highest stage of dictatorship, to its archenemy – a change of image that allowed Stalinism to reach the peak of its ideological influence in the decade following the complete defeat of the fascist Axis. Anti-fascism continued to play a central role in Soviet ideology, but with a diminishing influence due to the relative marginalization of fascism in the decades immediately following the world war, up until the time when the Soviet system entered its death throes.

This interpretation of the fate of Soviet ideology is undoubtedly correct, as the role of the Soviet Union in defeating Nazism was indeed the communist movement’s strongest ideological argument after World War II, far exceeding the reference to the Bolshevik legacy of the Russian Revolution. However, what Furet and other anti-communists overlooked is that the liberalism to which they claimed to belong, just as the Stalinists claimed to belong to Marxism, was also based on anti-fascism, the difference being that it combined fascism with Stalinism under the category of totalitarianism. This was and remains the central claim of the Atlanticist type of liberalism, inaugurated by the Atlantic Charter that the United States and Britain concluded in 1941 to cement their alliance in World War II, and which became the basis of the Atlantic Alliance (NATO) established against the Soviet Union during the Cold War.

This Atlanticist ideology turned a blind eye, however, to the imperialist colonial roots of fascism as analysed by the great German-American Jewish thinker Hannah Arendt, for the obvious reason that NATO was established while its member states still ruled over colonial empires throughout the Global South. So much so that the postwar colonial fascist regime of Portugal itself was one of NATO’s founders. As the world entered the age of decolonization, the Atlanticist ideology focused on opposing Soviet communism without abandoning its opposition to fascism, but almost limiting the latter to Nazism and the genocide of European Jews that it perpetrated. Thus, the Atlanticist ideology was able to claim a monopoly on representing the values ​​of political freedom and democracy upheld by historical liberalism, while it was trampling and continues to trample these very values ​​in the Global South.

We have reached today a historical turning point in which the liberal claim that NATO has been wearing as a mask has fallen, at a time when that claim had just reached a new peak with the Alliance’s opposition to the Russian invasion of Ukraine and its claim to represent liberal values ​​against Vladimir Putin’s neo-fascist rule. This latter claim was made despite the rise of neo-fascism within the ranks of NATO itself and its arrival to power in some of its member states, including the United States under the presidency of Donald Trump. Atlanticist liberals continued nevertheless to use anti-totalitarianism, including opposition to fascism and neo-fascism, as the basis of their own ideology, portraying their struggle as a modern version of the struggle of (imperialist) liberalism against fascism in the 1930s, which took place in various countries of the Global North.

Today, the liberal mask has finally fallen from the Atlanticist ideology through the solidarity and collusion manifested by its leaders with an Israeli state ruled by neo-fascist and neo-Nazi factions of the Zionist colonialist movement – a state that is committing in the Gaza Strip the most heinous deliberate genocidal war waged by an industrialized state since the Nazi genocide, along with ongoing criminal abuses against the Palestinian people in the West Bank as well as in Israeli prisons, thus revealing a violent racist hostility towards the Palestinians relegated to the rank of subhuman beings (Untermenschen) like the Nazis did to the Jews.

In light of this position of the Atlanticists, their liberal claim in opposing the Russian invasion of Ukraine has lost any credibility, just as their liberal claim to oppose fascism and genocide, and uphold other pillars of the ideology formulated by their predecessors after World War II and enshrined in the 1945 United Nations Charter, has become worthless. The great paradox in this historical shift is that the Atlanticists are using concern for the Jewish victims of Nazism as a pretext to justify their stance. They draw from the history of the struggle against Nazism a lesson impregnated with racist colonial logic, choosing solidarity with those who claim to represent all Jews, and whom the Atlanticists have come to see as part of their “white” world, even when they have themselves become criminal perpetrators of genocide, over solidarity with their non-“white” victims.

Thus, Hannah Arendt’s theory of the origins of totalitarianism has been proven correct, since an anti-totalitarianism that only sees antisemitic hostility towards Jews as the evil’s root, while ignoring the colonial legacy that is no less horrific than the crimes committed by Nazism, such an incomplete anti-totalitarianism is doomed to collapse, marred by an inability to overcome the white supremacist complex that presided over the greatest crimes of the modern era, including the Nazi extermination of European Jews, whom the Nazis saw as non-white intruders in their “living space” (Lebensraum) of white Nordic Europe.

Gilbert Achcar’s blog

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Would a Harris/Walz Administration be Economically Progressive?
August 27, 2024


Image by Chsdrummajor07, Creative Commons 4.0

My answer to the question posed in this article’s headline is: probably not to a significant extent. I will explain further below.

As a presidential candidate, Kamala Harris has been forced to contend with the conflicting interests of different factions of the Democratic Party. On the one hand much of the Democratic base–and the American population in general–supports such social democratic policies as Medicare for All and a guarantee by the federal government of a job for every American. On the other hand, Harris and the Democratic Party in general are funded by big business. Democrat Party business donors want to see economic policies that will enhance their control over the American economy; they want the government to minimize, if not entirely eliminate any policy that might redistribute wealth toward the working class or regulate business in the public interest.

The contradictions inherent in attempting to appeal to both business interests and poor, working class and environmentally conscious voters is the most likely explanation for the oft-repeated criticism that Harris has been vague, silent or incoherent in her public policy stances. During her time in the US Senate (which coincided with her first run for the Democratic presidential nomination in 2019), she supported Medicare for All, a federal job guarantee and a ban on fracking. In the face of pushback from powerful business interests and concerns about potentially alienating certain sections of “moderate” voters, she has reversed herself on all three issues.

For her presidential platform, there have been indications of support for building upon the Keynesian measures implemented by the Biden administration to stabilize the American economy after the Covid pandemic. Often many aspects of her platform have lacked specific details. Harris’s supporters have framed her policy positions as aiming to create a “care economy”: the spurring of federal government investment in securing greater housing, educational, child care, elder care and health care access for ordinary Americans. She has called for raising the national minimum wage–but has not suggested by how much. She has called for federal government subsidies for new homebuyers; an expansion of the earned income and child tax credits; and called for action to fight price gouging on groceries. She has said she supports passing the Protecting the Right to Organize (PRO) Act, which would make it easier for workers to form unions.

One barrier in passing Harris’s proposals remains the US Senate’s filibuster. Since the Obama era the Republicans have repeatedly abused the filibuster, making it necessary for a 60 vote supermajority to pass many Democrat backed bills. One way to avoid the filibuster is the budget reconciliation process whereby legislation related to the federal budget can pass the US Senate with a simple 50 vote majority. The budget reconciliation process was used in early 2021 to pass the Biden Administration’s American Rescue Plan Act. To the latter, Democrats attempted to attach a measure instituting a national $15/hr minimum wage (the federal government raised it to its current rate of $7.25/hr in 2009). However, the Senate parliamentarian advised that a minimum wage measure did not belong in a budgetary bill–contradicting the argument of other experts that minimum wage legislation did affect the federal budget and thus was not improper to include in a spending bill. Harris, acting as president of the Senate in her position as Biden’s vice-president, agreed to drop the minimum wage provision based on the parliamentarian’s recommendation.

The Senate parliamentarian has no legal authority. US Senators have no obligation to comply with the parliamentarian’s recommendations. When the Senate parliamentarian objected to tax related legislation early in the administration of George W. Bush, Senate Republicans simply fired him. But as representatives of the “left” party in the American political system, Harris and her Democratic colleagues are in a special predicament. They are in a forever struggle to show the business community that American capitalism is safe in their hands. In trying to pass even the most mildly redistributive measures like the aborted minimum wage hike, it has been common for Democrats to try to demonstrate to the business community that they are proceeding with the utmost caution, that they are not moving “too far to the left.” For Democrats, demonstrating that caution includes respecting the conservative guardrails of American politics like the Senate parliamentarian and the filibuster.

When American Prospect executive editor David Dayen brought up the possibility of eliminating the filibuster with multiple Democratic US Senators at the recent Democratic National Convention(DNC), almost all seemed reluctant to talk about the subject. Democrats have indicated that if they retain their 50 seat Senate majority in November’s election, they will enact rules to eliminate the filibuster for two areas of legislation: to expand voting protections and to encode abortion rights. Apart from those exceptions, Democrats will continue to refrain from exercising their ability as the majority party to completely eliminate the filibuster, thus allowing Republicans to continue to derail Democrat backed legislation. By doing so, Democrats are attempting to show the business community that as they advocate for mildly redistributive measures like an expanded child tax credit, they are fully respectful of all the conservative guardrails of American politics.

Should Democrats retain their simple 50 seat Senate majority in November’s election, the Republican abuse of the filibuster will provide them with a convenient excuse to shelve legislation which they formally support but for which they hold little real enthusiasm: for example the PRO Act.

Democrats and Corporate Power

As Michelle Goldberg recently observed in a New York Times piece cheerleading calls by Harris and speakers at the DNC to fight price gouging and other abuses by corporate monopolies, a perfect ally in that fight would be Lina Khan, the Biden appointed chair of the Federal Trade Commission. Khan has used her position to pursue vigorous antitrust enforcement against corporate monopolies. Khan has faced strong opposition from many Republicans but has also gained notable support among them as well. Republicans who view themselves as representing medium sized and small business against corporate behemoths like Google–such as Donald Trump’s running mate J.D. Vance–have expressed support for Khan.

However in July, two billionaire Harris donors–the media mogul Barry Diller and Silicon Valley venture capitalist Reid Hoffman–publicly called for Khan to be fired. One of Harris’s spokespeople, Maryland governor Wes Moore, indicated in a CNBC interview that the Harris camp was ambivalent if not in outright disagreement with Khan’s antitrust approach. Moore suggested that a Harris administration would have friendlier antitrust policies for “large industries.”

The broad outlines of Harris’s economic policy have been formulated by figures from the corporate world. Two such leading figures are Brian Deese and Mike Pyle, both former Biden White House officials and top executives at Blackrock, the global asset management giant. Another leading advisor is Deanne Millison, until 2023 Vice-President Harris’s chief economic advisor and currently a lobbyist for the Ford Motor Company. Harris has particularly strong links to figures from Silicon Valley. Her brother-in-law Tony West, recently took unpaid leave from his position as Uber’s chief legal officer to serve as an advisor to her presidential campaign. Prominent Google lawyer Karen Dunn has also been advising Harris in her presidential run–after the Biden/Harris administration successfully sued Google for having an illegal search engine monopoly and is potentially weighing the option of breaking Google up into smaller companies.

Tim Walz

For many in the Democrats’ left-liberal base, Kamala Harris’s strong corporate connections have been more than offset by the appointment of Minnesota Governor Tim Walz as her running mate. As Minnesota governor, Walz signed into law a bevy of progressive reforms: enhanced abortion rights protections; 12 weeks of paid medical and family leave for Minnesota workers; universal, free breakfast and lunch provision for the state’s public school students; a program to assist low income Minnesotans to obtain insulin; crackdowns on safety violations at Amazon warehouses in the state; a 20 percent wage boost for Uber and Lyft drivers in the state.

Left-liberal commentators gushed over Walz. Robert Borosage, in The Nation, declared that the Walz nomination was yet another sign that Democrats were moving back towards Keynesian policies since Joe Biden assumed the presidency: “waving goodbye to the neoliberal consensus”–deregulation, job killing free trade deals and fiscal austerity–that constituted the Party’s priorities under Barack Obama and Bill and Hillary Clinton. In Jacobin, Branko Marcetic celebrated the nomination of the “unabashedly progressive” Walz as evidence of the growing influence of Bernie Sander supporters on the Democratic Party. The Democratic Socialists of America took credit for exerting its influence to have Walz picked as Harris’s running mate over the arch-zionist neoliberal Pennsylvania Democratic governor Josh Shapiro. Meanwhile labor sociologist Barry Eidlin told Jacobin’s Alex N. Press that “Walz is a clear example of a middle-of-the-road politician who is open to listening to movements.” According to Eidlin, with Walz as vice-president and his track record of dialoguing with social movements, such movements would be able to influence the Democratic Party.

Tim Walz: A Darker Side

Some progressive Minnesotans have views of Tim Walz different from those held by the likes of Marcetic and Borosage. Minneapolis/St. Paul African American American community organizer Rod Adams told Sarah Jaffe of In These Times that Walz as governor was “super beholden to corporations.” In 2023, Mary Turner, president of the Minnesota Nurses Association, accused Walz of “siding with the profits and power of corporate executives over the rights and needs of patients and workers.” She added that “Governor Walz has made clear to Minnesotans that their democratic process does not work for them, but for the wealthy and powerful few.”

Turner’s denunciations were inspired by Walz’s succumbing to pressure from the Mayo Clinic and other hospitals and derailing legislation requiring hospitals in Minnesota to form committees (with nurses given a leading voice) to determine appropriate nursing staffing levels at their respective worksites. Mayo had threatened to withdraw billions in planned new investments from Minnesota if the legislation went into effect.

Then there are the views of indigenous and environmental activists who see Walz as a tool of fossil fuel industries with his backing of the Line 3 tar sands pipeline in Minnesota. After running for governor in 2018 as an opponent of the pipeline, once assuming office he gradually transitioned into supporting the project, appointing oil industry friendly persons to key state regulatory agencies and deploying law enforcement to violently repress activists peacefully protesting the pipeline.

The Minnesota Model: A Blueprint for National Action?

The suite of progressive reforms signed into law by Walz has been lauded by progressives as the “Minnesota Model,” providing a potential blueprint for Kamala Harris to implement her vision of the “care economy”at the national level. What gets lost in celebration of this model is that in passing progressive reforms, Walz was responding to pressure from numerous social justice movements in the Minneapolis/St. Paul region. These movements have been built up over the course of years through patient and arduous effort by working class activists. The movements–focusing on labor issues, police brutality, immigrant rights, housing, education and health care–are the real embodiment of the Minnesota model, not Tim Walz himself (as some progressives seem to think). Walz has been described as a progressive firebrand; however he doesn’t have a long track record of being so. Representing a Republican leaning rural district in Congress for 12 years (2007-19), he mainly showed himself to be a relatively cautious centrist.

Walz has benefited as governor from a relatively strong Minnesota economy and a large state budget surplus: in the neoliberal era, under such conditions, political and business elites have often been willing to tolerate greater social spending and other modest concessions to ordinary people.

It will be considerably harder to implement any parallel to the Minnesota Model at the national level. For one, the US president and Congress are particularly vulnerable to pressure from Wall Street to rein in fiscal deficits; thus any increases in social spending by a potential Harris/Walz administration will probably be modest, at best.

The administration of Bill Clinton provides an instructive example as to how a Harris/Walz administration might evolve if elected. Clinton campaigned for the presidency in 1992 on a proposal for federal government spending on infrastructure as a way to stimulate the economy and provide jobs. According to Bob Woodward’s 1994 book The Agenda, after winning the presidency Clinton was subjected to a series of lectures from US Federal Reserve Bank officials about the need to discard his infrastructure spending proposal and instead concentrate his entire presidential agenda on implementing Wall Street friendly budget deficit slashing policies. Clinton reacted with dismay according to Woodward: “You mean to tell me that the success of the program and my reelection hinges on the Federal Reserve and a bunch of fucking bond traders?” Subsequently, Clinton’s infrastructure plan was forgotten; he significantly expanded the Earned Income Tax Credit for America’s low income population but otherwise spent nearly his entire presidency cooperating with Republicans to significantly slash budget deficits (in the interests of Wall Street).

Woodward portrayed Clinton entering the presidency as a starry eyed progressive idealist, looking to harness the power of the federal government to benefit ordinary people. According to this portrait, it was only after becoming president that Clinton realized he would be forced to orient his entire presidency around bowing down to Wall Street’s power. Alexander Cockburn, writing in the Los Angeles Times in 1994, argued that Clinton was probably nowhere near as naive as Woodward portrayed him. Clinton’s campaign in 1992 showed plenty of signs that he was aligned with Wall Street. His proposal for infrastructure spending during the campaign was paired with caveats about such new spending being contingent on cutting spending elsewhere in the federal budget. Like many of the noises today emanating from the Harris/Walz campaign in support of the “care economy,” Clinton’s infrastructure proposal was substantially vague–it was probably offered not with the intention of seriously trying to implement it but only as rhetorical fluff during the campaign to mobilize progressive voters. The Clinton team’s probable intention all along–from the 1992 campaign to the assumption of the presidency–was to serve Wall Street. As Christopher Hitchens wrote in his 1999 book No One Left to Lie To: “the essence of American politics” is “the manipulation of populism by elitism.” Rhetorically–especially during election campaigns–politicians present themselves as populists operating on behalf of ordinary people; meanwhile, behind the scenes, their actual policies are molded to enhance the power of economic elites.

But then again Harris/Walz face somewhat different conditions in 2024 than those faced by Bill Clinton and Al Gore in 1992. In current times (as during the 1990’s) one hears frequent warnings from Wall Street elites, politicians and media commentators about the urgent need to rein in federal budget deficits. However, at the same time, the Covid pandemic and the evolving geopolitical and economic rivalry with China has encouraged sections of elite policymakers and business leaders to support considerably greater federal government spending and economic intervention in order to strengthen the domestic American economy. Both the Biden and Trump administrations significantly expanded tariffs to protect American manufacturers against Chinese competition. A visible portion of congressional Republicans supported the Biden administration’s $1 trillion infrastructure bill in 2021 as well as Biden’s $280 billion CHIPS Act of 2022; Republican governor Gregg Abbott of Texas indicated support for the CHIPS Act’s underlying principle by signing into law Texas’s own $1.4 billion investment into semiconductors. Also recent Democratic legislation to expand the Child Tax Credit passed the US House with a strong majority of the body’s Republicans supporting it.; however the measure failed in the Senate with heavy Republican opposition.

Many Republican politicians and media commentators have denounced the increased spending policies of the Biden administration as evidence of the latter being communist. However, beneath the surface of such stupid demagoguery, it is clear that there is a modicum of symmetry between both parties about the need for an industrial policy to strengthen domestic American business (especially in the context of rivalry with China). It is within that context that one expects the greatest chance for elements of Minnesota Model type policies to be passed at the national level: greater government investments in health care, education, child care, expanded child tax credits, a higher minimum wage and similar measures justified to make American workers more productive in economic competition with China.

Robert Borsage was wrong to write that the nomination of Tim Walz represents the Democratic Party “waving goodbye” to neoliberalism. Democrats are still fundamentally neoliberal even if they have taken a slightly Keynesian turn in recent years. It will be up to social movements of the type which successfully pressured Governor Tim Walz to sign Minnesota model policies into law to keep up the pressure on Democrats if there is any chance of them moving further away from neoliberalism.

Sunday, August 25, 2024

 

Tolkien’s deplorable cultus: Right-wing hobbit enthusiasts and the urgency of Marxist criticism in fantasy

Published 
LINKS.ORG.AU
Spectre lord of the rings

First published at Spectre.

Observing his readers’ unexpected exuberance over The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings in the United States in the late 1960s, a somewhat dismayed J. R. R. Tolkien referred to his fans there as “my deplorable cultus,” going on to say that these people “don’t know what they’ve been moved by and they are quite drunk on it. Many young Americans are involved in the stories in a way I am not.”1He was likely thinking of the long-haired hippie types, those scrawling “Frodo Lives!” as graffiti or wearing “Gandalf for President” lapel pins, but Tolkien probably had no idea just how wild his fans would get in the decades to come. In 2024, a number of prominent right-wingers embrace Tolkien’s work as the inspiration for their own ultraconservative worldview. While some Marxists may look upon this scene with bemusement, fantasy as a mode and a genre is far too important to allow the right-wingers to take for themselves, and that includes the works of Tolkien.

Among these hobbit-loving political and business leaders are veritable “Masters of the Universe,” including current Republican vice-presidential nominee, J. D. Vance, his mentor, billionaire Peter Thiel, and even the Prime Minister of Italy, Giorgia Meloni, who in her younger days attended “Hobbit Camps” run by neofascist Tolkien admirers and who continues to cite Tolkien’s work as the inspiration for her far-right political views. These celebrity enthusiasts are joined by a vast and possibly growing international cohort of Tolkien fanatics who openly embrace white supremacist, racist, anti-immigrant, neo-Nazi, and otherwise right-wing ideologies, many of whom take The Lord of the Rings as something like holy scripture.

Such fans are the bane of Tolkien Studies, and there have been incidents of trolling of lectures and conferences. This baleful discourse has also plagued Tolkien and fantasy fandom in the broader popular culture, as right-wing zealots have attacked film and television adaptations for their apparently “woke” casting and lack of faithfulness to the original or to what they imagine to be “reality” itself. Even those Tolkien fans or scholars who consider themselves relatively conservative in their political views have been alarmed by the ultra-right’s attempts to claim Tolkien as their own.

Fantasy is fundamentally the literature of alterity, a means of empowering the imagination to think of the world differently. As such it remains a vital resource for the Marxist critique of all that exists, to borrow a phrase from Karl Marx, who so effectively explored the unreality of the so-called “reality” that obscures the true social relations in societies organized under the capitalist mode of production. And by positing the nonexistent as real, as the great socialist writer China Miéville has put it, fantasy “is good to think with.”2I maintain that the writings of Tolkien, who for better or worse still stands as the supremely canonical and foundational figure in fantasy, are also good to think with.

Along those lines, Marxist approaches to Tolkien are all the more necessary today, both to illuminate the potentially radical value of his work and to stand athwart the neofascists who wish to arrogate Tolkien to themselves. Marxists must “read differently,” bringing to bear the full force of a dialectical criticism that refuses facile moralism, instead analyzing the dynamic world system Tolkien’s legendarium figures forth, exposing its ideological limits while also limning its potential for helping us to imagine radical alternatives.

Reading Tolkien dialectically

The idea that Tolkien himself would approve of tech-industry millionaires who aspire to positions of power in government is absurd on its face, but then there must be aspects of Tolkien’s writings and views that do appeal to such people. For many on the political left, the embrace of Tolkien by far-right conservatives like Vance, Thiel, or Meloni is proof positive that Tolkien’s work is inherently right-wing. Many Marxist critics have long dismissed the fantasy genre — as opposed to science fiction, for instance, not to mention realism — as reactionary, and Tolkien’s writings are viewed as emblematic of the genre’s retrogressive and illiberal sensibilities.3Fantasy in its very form has been considered politically reactionary, backwards-looking, religiously oriented, and hostile to technology, all things that Tolkien’s world would seem to reinforce. Tolkien’s outsized influence on what would become a huge fantasy industry does not help the cause, as the success of The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings has only spurred the popular appeal of medievalist or romantic visions of an enchanted past.

Science fiction, by contrast, tends to be seen as a more progressive genre, characterized by what critic Darko Suvin called “cognitive estrangement,” whereby everyday reality is defamiliarized (in a good, Brechtian sense) through rational if not scientific tropes, often oriented toward technology and the future. Fantasy, in this view, offers only a mythic or religious estrangement that is inherently conservative. Even so dialectically nuanced a reader as Fredric Jameson has insisted that the two genres not be conflated.4Some left-leaning writers have resisted this tendency, most notably Miéville, who has criticized the Suvinian position as ideological in its own right and defended the uses of fantasy for radical political thought.5And, of course, there are many other left-leaning fantasy writers out there, including Angela Carter, Michael Moorcock, Ursula Le Guin, Samuel R. Delany, Octavia Butler, Terry Pratchett, and Nnedi Okorafor, to name a few.

I, myself, have tried to push against this tendency in Marxist criticism, offering a sort of Marxist reading of Tolkien that seeks to uncover the utopian as well as the ideological import of these writings, in my books J.R.R. Tolkien’s ‘The Hobbit’: Realizing History Through Fantasy (2022), Representing Middle-earth: Tolkien, Form, and Ideology (2024), and my forthcoming book on Tolkien’s Orcs. My approach in these studies is somewhat in the vein of Jameson’s The Political Unconscious: Narrative as a Socially Symbolic Act (1981). Jameson himself had written an excellent study of an actual fascist writer, Fables of Aggression: Wyndham Lewis, the Modernist as Fascist (1979), a dialectical reading that disclosed the potentially liberatory politics latent within the archconservative’s prose. I believe that Tolkien may likewise be read in such a way that Marxists and others on the left can embrace The HobbitThe Lord of the Rings, and other writings as works worthy of analysis and of admiration, even if this may also involve reading them “against the grain,” to invoke Walter Benjamin’s metaphor.

A Marxist approach to Tolkien does not simply involve selective reading, looking for utopian needles in the vast ideological haystacks, but rather it would examine the totality of the work, disclosing the “positive” alongside the “negative” to be found there. Just as Marx himself discovered in the royalist Honoré de Balzac’s fiction the most fully fleshed out vision of bourgeois social relations available, just as Georg Lukács found in conservative Walter Scott’s historical romances the basis for a Marxian historicist worldview, and just as Jameson revealed the utopian potential in the fascist Wyndham Lewis’s vicious anticommunism, a dialectical reading of Tolkien’s work can elicit productive material for radical cultural criticism. Given the overwhelming popularity of Tolkien and Tolkien-related franchises today, in fact, Marxist criticism has a duty not to cede this entire domain to the right-wingers who wish to claim it as their own.

“The rising tide of orquerie”: Race and class in Tolkien

It should go without saying that a Marxist interpretation would not try to whitewash Tolkien’s own troubling views or the vexing problems to be found in his work, for example, the many involving race and class. Liberal fans of Tolkien, distraught by the enthusiastic response of white supremacists and other far-right hobbit fanciers, have rushed to defend the Professor. As if to confirm his anti-fascism, such readers often cite Tolkien’s description of Hitler as “that ruddy little ignoramus.”6When in 1938 he was asked by a German publisher to confirm that he was 100 percent “arisch” (that is, Aryan, with no “Jewish blood”), Tolkien’s anger was palpable: “I am not clear as to what you intend by arisch. I am not of Aryan extraction: that is Indo-iranian…. But if I am to understand that you are enquiring whether I am of Jewish origin, I can only reply that I regret that I appear to have no ancestors of that gifted people.”7This letter is frequently quoted as “proof” that Tolkien was neither profascist nor anti-Semitic, although as Robert Stuart has observed in his Tolkien, Race, and Racism in Middle-earth (2022), “philo-Semitism is just as racist as anti-Semitism, in that it ranks races hierarchically.”8And there can be no question that within Tolkien’s legendarium, the various “races” (that is, Elves, Men, Dwarves, and so on, as well as their intramural subdivisions or ethnicities), are clearly ranked in a hierarchical order.

Indeed, despite the liberal apologists’ best intentions, there is obviously much in Tolkien’s work that would support the claims by white supremacists that he is one of them. The consistently racist depictions of Orcs, for example, who are invariably “swart,” “sallow-skinned,” and “slant-eyed,” is rather striking, as is the fact that, while appearing to be human in almost all respects, the Orcs are demonized and dehumanized, constantly compared to beasts, insects, maggots, and the like, not just by individual characters but by the narrator as well. Worse, even though Tolkien’s Orcs are utterly human, perhaps all too human, with personalities, families, communities, cities, and so on, the “heroes” in Tolkien’s writings hunt and kill them even in “peacetime,” without any compunction and at times quite gleefully. There is only one reference to an Orc being taken captive in all of Tolkien’s writings, and that for questioning, after which he is summarily beheaded. Even as Frodo, Gandalf, Aragorn, and others exhibit sympathy for the treacherous Gollum, the traitorous wizard Saruman, and the wicked lackey Wormtongue, no one shows the least bit of mercy or kindness for Orcs, even Orcs who are fleeing and thus pose no immediate threat. Undoubtedly, this uncompromising mercilessness toward the ostensible “enemy” may be characteristic of many on the “New Right” as well.

In a famous letter, Tolkien explicitly describes the Orcs’ appearance: “The Orcs are definitely stated to be corruptions of the ‘human’ form seen in Elves and Men. They are (or were) squat, broad, flat-nosed, sallow-skinned, with wide mouths and slant eyes: in fact degraded and repulsive versions of the (to Europeans) least lovely Mongol-type.”9It is easy enough to imagine Orcs as being “Oriental” in some sense, hence a threat to “the West.” In fact, by a perverse ruse of history, some Russian ultra-nationalists have in recent years embraced the idea of themselves as Russian Orcs, championing brutal force to counter the Western influence. Those who wish to claim that Tolkien was not himself racist, or that his works do not exhibit racism, are not very convincing under these circumstances. Moreover, the exoticizing and Orientalizing of the enemy obviously provides fodder to the anti-immigrant and white supremacist arguments of many on the far right in Europe and the Americas.

Notwithstanding the racist characterization of Orcs in his writings, Tolkien often imagines orkishness in the real world as defined by attitudes and values more than by racial or national character. Using the term metaphorically in a wartime letter, for example, Tolkien wrote that “There are no genuine Uruks [Orcs], that is folk made bad by the intention of their maker,” adding that “there are human creatures that seem irredeemable short of a special miracle, and that there are probably abnormally many of such creatures in Deutschland and Nippon — but certainly these unhappy countries have no monopoly: I have met them, or thought so, in England’s green and pleasant land,” elsewhere noting that “we started out with a great many Orcs on our side.”10In fact, orkishness for Tolkien is often associated with technology, automation, and industry. In The Hobbit, he suggests that orcs likely “invented some of the machines that have since troubled the world, especially the ingenious devices for killing large numbers of people at once.” (As it happens, Gandalf had just killed “several” orcs at once, leaving “a smell like gunpowder,” and just a few pages later Gandalf kills the Great Goblin and many dozens of orcs along with him.)11There is terrible irony in the fact that the founders and principle investors of Palantir Technologies and Anduril Industries, with their vast network of connections to various military organizations, should be devotees of Tolkien, who himself would have undoubtedly considered them the enemy.

Tolkien at times used the term “Orc” to refer to those who operated noisy machinery, announcing “there is an Orc!” when a motorcycle roared past, for instance. “Still you never quite know what is going on under the head of an apparent orc on a motor bike,” Tolkien once wrote. Tolkien also wrote of receiving a fan letter from a worker in a Siemens factory, which he described as from an “Orc,” for apparently merely working for such a company was enough to make someone an Orc. The Siemens factory in question produced massive cables for the telecommunications industry, so perhaps that too has something to do with it — the corporation for which this English “Orc” worked was literally an agent of capitalist globalization! If anything, the industries of Silicon Valley and their ilk, devoted as most are to high tech, artificial intelligence, software, telecom, and transnational commerce, would almost certainly represent the most “evil” forces in the Middle-earth of our own day, in Tolkien’s view. Far from representing wise wizards like Gandalf or doughty hobbits like Sam, these right-wing Middle-earth fanatics like Thiel and Vance would have been part of what Tolkien once called “the rising tide of orquerie.”12

Right-wing hobbit fanciers

As elaborated in a recent Politico article, “‘Hillbilly Hobbit’: How Lord of the Rings Shaped JD Vance’s Worldview,” the junior senator from Ohio and current vice-presidential nominee has long cited Tolkien’s work as an inspiration for his political awakening. Naming Tolkien as his favorite author, Vance in 2021 explained, “I’m a big Lord of the Rings guy, and I think, not realizing it at the time, but a lot of my conservative worldview was influenced by Tolkien growing up.”13While extolling the virtues of simple, rustic, “traditional” lives, with the hobbits of the Shire as stand-ins for out-of-work Appalachian miners or Midwestern family farmers, Vance also seems to imagine himself as a Gandalf, a gifted, well-educated tech “wizard” who can inspire the small folk to greatness while also paternalistically looking out for them.

Vance is among the latest figures in a multinational panoply of right-wing political leaders and businessmen who claim Tolkien’s ideas as the source of their own. Vance’s mentor, Thiel, has frequently mentioned Tolkien’s influence as well as (more bizarrely) that of his former Stanford professor René Girard. Thiel has founded a number of investment funds and other companies named after terms found in Tolkien’s legendarium, including Palantir Technologies, Mithril Capital, Valar Ventures, Lembas LLC, Rivendell One LLC, and Arda Capital. Thiel, along with Vance, were also key investors involved in the founding of Anduril Industries, a defense contractor. (For those not familiar with Tolkienian terminology, the palantír is a “seeing stone,” much like a crystal ball that operates at times as a form of telecommunication; mithril refers to a pure form of silver, the most valuable of all precious metals in Middle-earth; the Valar are the god-like beings, the “Powers” of the world, modeled somewhat on the Norse pantheon; lembas is the elven “way-bread,” a substance that is almost magically sustaining and healthful; Rivendell is the common name of Elrond’s elven enclave, a site of great learning and restoration in Tolkien’s universe; Arda is the name for the planet Earth itself, the world as we know it; and Andúril is the elvish name Aragorn gives to his sword, a name translated as “Flame of the West.”) Needless to say, perhaps, but these names are not merely homages to a favorite novelist’s fiction, but are calculated to symbolize the corporate mission of each entity. Palantir Technologies is deeply involved in the business of surveillance and data collection, for example, so the lost “seeing stones” of Númenor are particularly suggestive in that context.

Apparently recruited by Thiel while still at Yale Law School, Vance worked for Mithril Capital before founding — with a large investment from Thiel himself — Narya Capital, an investment fund named for the elven ring of power worn by Gandalf in The Lord of the Rings. Narya is the Ring of Fire, whose magical properties include the ability to inspire others, which suggests that in the story itself, Gandalf’s own prodigious powers as a wizard were enhanced and focused through his use of this ring. Presumably, Vance imagines his own Ivy League-formed powers to be strengthened by the sorcery of finance capital, which as Marx himself observed can involve the most phantasmagoric elements of necromancy, turning dead labor into living capital, and through leverage, generating massive effects from relatively small investments.

Vance and Thiel are more famous than most, but in recent years there has been a large and burgeoning movement of the “new right,” alt-right, white supremacist, and neofascist ideologues embracing Tolkien, drawing upon his stories and their popularity to justify their views of racial purity and European-American dominance. Members of such movements have plagued Tolkien studies and fandom, along with medieval studies and other areas, often emerging in more mainstream media in connection with popular culture and the “culture wars” attendant thereto. For example, the “diverse” casting of the Amazon Prime series The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power, which features actors of color playing elves, dwarves, and protohobbits, called forth a firestorm of protest from fans, some of whom openly identified with fascist or neo-Nazi perspectives, who castigated the producers for their “woke” program. Beyond criticizing the sort of choices that go into any film or television adaptations, however, some of these Tolkien fans were questioning not merely the faithfulness to Tolkien’s own writings but also the degree to which nonwhites have any claim to Tolkien’s world at all.

Indeed, to the chagrin of many liberal, left-leaning, or even apolitical fans, the association of Tolkien with fascism has become something of a fait accompli, at least in certain circles, given the ardor of the right-wing enthusiasts. Most prominent, perhaps, is Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, who honed her ideological perspective in “Hobbit Camps” run by neofascists who were also attempting to restore Mussolini-like regimes in Italy and elsewhere. As The Washington Post reported last year, “for Meloni and a horde of fantasy-loving politicians in Italy’s far right, nothing is more precious than the works of Tolkien, in whose writing they see themselves as a ragtag fellowship battling the Lidless Eye of the European left. Italy’s post-fascist far-right hosted ‘Hobbit Camps’ for young conservatives as far back as the 1970s.”14Guardian article noted that, in her own book, Meloni claims that her favorite character “is the peace-loving everyman Samwise Gamgee, ‘just a hobbit.’” A few pages later she’s implicitly likening Italy to the lost kingdom of Númenor and citing the character Faramir’s call to arms in The Two Towers. Ultimately, she seems to view Tolkien’s work as a didactic antiglobalization fable, a hyperconservative epic that advocates a full-blown war against the modern world in the name of traditional values.”15In November 2023, Meloni’s government launched a massive exhibit at Rome’s National Gallery of Modern and Contemporary Art on Tolkien’s work and memorabilia.

Meloni, for her part, was obviously deeply involved in Italian neofascist Tolkien communities early on, attending Hobbit Camp — she has referred to it as a “political laboratory” — already in the early 1990s. But it seems that the rapid spread of Tolkien’s influence among right-wing groups and individuals came only after December 2001, with the release of the Peter Jackson-directed adaptation The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring, followed by the next two installments (The Two Towers and The Return of the King) hitting theaters in 2002 and 2003. The timing was serendipitous, as this was arguably the first international blockbuster film and franchise to emerge after the attacks of September 11, 2001, with The Two Towers released on the eve of the US invasion of Iraq and Afghanistan by the “coalition of the willing” who were to be combatting what President George W. Bush had dubbed “the Axis of Evil.”

Suddenly, an epic adventure in which wise leaders working with simple “small folk” in the attempt to overcome a vast and evil empire bent on covering the world in darkness took on additional resonance for many viewers. For some, undoubtedly, the “clash of civilizations” heralded by Samuel P. Huntington could be easily transcoded onto Middle-earth, with the Easterlings, Southrons, the peoples of Mordor, and above all Orcs (that is, servants of an “evil” Sauron) being opposed to the very existence of the “free peoples of the West,” who quickly became coded as white, Christian, capitalist, and “freedom-loving.” This timing made a right-wing interpretation of Tolkien’s works all the more salient.

It did not help that the films are far less nuanced than the novel upon which they are based, presenting a much more simplistic good-versus-evil scenario than that to be found in Tolkien’s own writings. Far be it for me to suggest that the right-leaning Tolkien super-fans like Vance do not read, but I think it is noteworthy that their sense of what “Tolkien” thinks seems to stem more from Jackson’s film adaptations (2001–2003) than from the novel itself, first published in three volumes in 1954 and 1955 (then released in its authorized paperback edition in the U.S. in 1965). Even Thiel, who has cited Tolkien as a formative influence in his life, managed to found or cofound numerous companies and funds — including Fieldlink (later renamed Confinity), PayPal, and Clarium Capital Management — that did not have Tolkien-inspired names in the years before the Jackson movies appeared; Palantir Technologies was founded only in 2003, by contrast. In Vance’s case, he would have only been seventeen years old when the first film was released, but then many of us read Tolkien in or even before high school. Still, he likely “came of age” amid the coincidental maelstrom of post-9/11 geopolitics and Lord of the Rings’s pop-cultural dominance.

“Dynamiting factories and power-stations”

As for Tolkien’s own personal political beliefs, which likely changed slightly over the years, Tolkien certainly opposed communism, socialism, or other left-wing programs, yet some anarchists have claimed him.16Most likely, Tolkien favored a political order somewhat like that of the Shire at the beginning of the Fourth Age (that is, after the conclusion of The Lord of the Rings), in which a relatively autonomous, culturally homogenous, somewhat isolated, and mostly self-governing community existed as part of a larger kingdom, where a distant and largely disinterested, though powerful, monarch saw to it that a status quo was maintained. In a letter dated November 29, 1943, Tolkien wrote,

My political opinions lean more and more to Anarchy (philosophically understood, meaning abolition of control not whiskered men with bombs)—or to “unconstitutional” Monarchy. I would arrest anybody who uses the word State (in any sense other than the inanimate realm of England and its inhabitants, a thing that has neither power, rights nor mind); and after a chance of recantation, execute them if they remained obstinate!…Give me a king whose chief interest in life is stamps, railways, or race-horses; and who has the power to sack his Vizier (or whatever you care to call him) if he does not like the cut of his trousers.

Lamenting the “frightful landslide into Theyocracy,” Tolkien adds that “the special horror of the present world is that the whole damned thing is in one bag. There is nowhere to fly to.” The interconnectedness of nations and peoples is part of the problem with the modern world, in Tolkien’s view, which leads him to write these somewhat devastating lines: “There is only one bright spot and that is the growing habit of disgruntled men of dynamiting factories and power-stations; I hope that, encouraged now as ‘patriotism,’ may remain a habit! But it won’t do any good, if it is not universal.”17Undoubtedly there are those among the right-wing Tolkien enthusiasts who would champion these notions of patriotic industrial sabotage or terrorism, but it seems unlikely that captains of industry and their allies (like Thiel or Vance) would do so. If nothing else, it would be very bad for their businesses and for the “working-class” people employed in those factories.

Tolkien’s own political and religious views are generally understood to be conservative, based in large part on his devout Roman Catholic values and his mistrust of modernization, reform, and “progress.” But he was not a supporter of fascism. If anything, as Stuart has suggested, Tolkien’s profound traditionalism may have made him more conservative than the fascists, who were after all quite modernist in their own ways, not to mention the fascists’ far-right appeal to a nationalist populism that would have seemed vulgar in comparison to Tolkien’s more aristocratic social sensibilities. In Tolkien’s legendarium, for instance, hereditary elites like Galadriel, Elrond, and Aragorn are the ones fit to rule, plus Dain among the Dwarves, Théoden or Bard among “Men.” And even in the relatively more democratic Shire, the “betters” among the hobbit families (the Tooks, the Brandybucks, the Bagginses) are recognized as such by their ostensible inferiors. Notably, when Sam ascends beyond his initially lowly station at the end of The Lord of the Rings, he adopts the name “Gardner” for his clan, dropping the plebian “Gamgee.”

As for being a conservative, Tolkien was not particularly loyal to the Tories, many of whom he felt were part of the problem; he opposed the imperialism of the British Empire, pointing out that “I love England (not Great Britain and certainly not the British Commonwealth (grr!)).” Remarking on a wartime photo of the Allied leaders, Tolkien says that “our little cherub,” Winston Churchill, “actually looked the biggest ruffian present,” even as Churchill was sitting next to “that bloodthirsty old murderer Josef Stalin.” Indeed, Tolkien’s real fear is of the “Americo-cosmopolitanism” to come, “when they have introduced American sanitation, morale-pep, feminism, and mass production” throughout the whole world.18

Today’s conservatives like Vance might well agree about American “feminism” (whatever that meant in 1943), but it is hard to believe that the founder of Narya Capital Management would be opposed to mass production and a global marketplace. Indeed, the far-right Tolkienians seem to be blithely selective in their uses of Tolkien’s work and ideas, embracing at times a romantic anticapitalism that lauds the “common man” in a preindustrial epoch, while at others insisting on support for the heaviest of heavy industries (mining, steel, automobiles, nuclear power, etc.) as well as championing the high tech sectors — Silicon Valley is, after all, the utopian “Shire” for Thiel and his minions — and seeking ever greater influence worldwide. The rhetoric of antiglobalization remains part of the populist message, of course, but it is difficult to imagine that people running Palantir Technologies, Mithril Capital, or Anduril Industries, veritable agents as well as beneficiaries of globalization, are themselves opposed to this worldwide financial, military, and industrial system.

Beyond good and evil

Where the far-right Tolkienians are perhaps most at home in Tolkien’s work can be found in their sense of moral certitude. Tolkien’s critics have accused him of establishing a world of overly simplistic good versus evil, with little room for nuance or interpretation, and these right-wing Tolkien fans often champion that aspect as a strength in both his work and his worldview. That is, the “moral clarity” of Tolkien can overcome the ambiguities and complexities of modern, and later “postmodern,” politics and culture, thus allowing wise Gandalf- or Galadriel-like leaders, along with their earnest common-folk acolytes like Frodo and Sam, to know what is right and what is wrong, and to act accordingly.

Yet here is where the misreading of Tolkien is most pronounced. Notwithstanding the many times words like “good” and “evil” appear in his writings, Tolkien consistently recognized the ambiguities and uncertainties with respect to the ethical dimension. Most importantly, he denied that evil even exists, while noting that most of what we take to be “evil” in the world derives from noble sentiments and good intentions.

“I do not deal in Absolute Evil. I do not think there is such a thing,” Tolkien explained, adding “I do not think that at any rate any ‘rational being’ is wholly evil. Satan fell. Morgoth fell before the creation of the physical world.” Sauron, who comes as close to an “evil” being as there is in The Lord of the Rings, was not evil at heart, but rather, “He had gone the way of all tyrants: beginning well, at least on the level that while desiring to order all things according to his own wisdom he still at first considered the (economic) well-being of the other inhabitant of the Earth.” Tolkien then points out that Sauron fell victim in part to his own good intentions, which were to rehabilitate Middle-earth, to bring harmony and order to a state of desolation and chaos, and to improve the lives of the people in the world. Tolkien observes that “When he [Sauron] found how greatly his knowledge was admired by all other rational creatures and how easy it was to influence them, his pride became boundless,” and as we know from Proverbs, “pride goeth before destruction and a haughty spirit before a fall.”19

Ironically, perhaps, Vance seems to model himself after this vision of Sauron, although he clearly would not think of himself as such. When Vance imagines himself as a Gandalf, a wise leader looking out for the interests and well-being of the “small folk” of various Shire-like rural communities such as those in Appalachia, he is in fact embracing Sauron’s position, at least as Tolkien understands it. Within The Lord of the Rings, part of the reason that Gandalf, as well as Galadriel and Aragorn, reject the opportunity to use the One Ring is that they realize that with such power they could not help but dominate others to the ultimate detriment of all, including themselves. It is not that the ring itself is evil — another bizarre idea introduced in Jackson’s films that is not present in the novel — but that it enhances the power of its users to make their will more speedily effective. Tolkien was canny enough to know that even a “good” person using such power, using it for the good, would “fall” into what (in retrospect, at least) would be seen as evil. There is an element here of the old saws about “the road to hell” and “power corrupts,” of course, but the main point is that Tolkien is not in fact dividing his world between forces of good and evil, but between those who desire to attain power (including the power to “do good”) and those who would abjure it. Indeed, in a 1959 letter responding to a reader’s query about what would have happened had Gandalf taken the ring, Tolkien wrote, “Gandalf as Ring-Lord would have been far worse than Sauron,” largely because he would have been “self-righteous,” thus more dangerous; “Gandalf would have made good detestable and seem evil.”20This is a fair warning to any Gandalf admirers who seek economic or political power in this, our all-too-real world, a caveat that the right-wing Tolkien admirers appear unlikely to heed.

In fact, it seems that many of the far-right Tolkien enthusiasts have translated key elements of The Lord of the Rings into a would-be hegemonic political and economic program for the US and the world today. This plan simultaneously posits a profoundly elitist, ultramodern power structure alongside a populist, demotic appeal to tradition. In this way, the right-wing Tolkien fanatics can envision themselves as both Gandalf and Sam Gamgee with equal aplomb, thus embodying the most powerful “good” being in the world with the most lovable and simplest everyman character, one who is working-class to boot. In this model, they can simultaneously envision themselves as ordinary people and as powerful wizards, whose elite educational backgrounds (Yale, Stanford, and so on) signify their greater “wisdom,” and whose mastery of the technological domains (Silicon Valley, venture capital, defense industries, and so on) exemplify their well-nigh “magical” abilities to operate effectively in a complex and dangerous world. These great masters are able to rouse and inspire the common people, which is to say hobbits, in the rural backwaters (that is, the Shire) through various related movements (for example, the Tea Party, Make America Great Again, the War on Woke, and now anti-DEI), which in turn convinces these “small folk” that they are essential to “saving the world” from whatever threatens it. Sauron and the One Ring, along with Saruman’s industrialism, increased immigration of “Swarthy Men” and “squint-eyed Southerners,” and the threat of Orcs (and “half-Orcs”!), become figures for liberalism, globalization, “diversity, equity, and inclusion,” and so forth.

In opposing such enemies, these wizards and the hobbits seek the return of the king — in the US in 2024, that’s Trump, naturally, but in any case a “strong” executive leader — who will then preside over various fiefdoms that will actually be “corporate monarchies,” seemingly autonomous locales that are in fact postmodern variations of the old “company towns,” now more or less under the dominion of billionaires like Elon Musk or Peter Thiel, or else their designees and assigns (since God knows they don’t have the time, energy, or competence to run governments). There is certainly a neofeudalist aspect to this, hence the rhetoric of romantic anticapitalism even among these titans of industry and abject apologists for capitalism, but ultimately the model is that of a corporate oligarchy in which “ordinary” Americans are ruled with an iron fist formed by an invisible hand, right down to the meticulous policing of borders, workplace policies, home ownership, privacy, and so forth.21Tolkien’s medievalist fantasy vision thus becomes a part of the plan for an utterly postmodern, twenty-first century reorganization of society in general.

Conclusion

When Tolkien referred to his American enthusiasts as his “deplorable cultus,” he was not objecting to the perceived liberalism or left-wing views of these American readers — in any case, we know that many who were thought of as hippies became, or turned out to be, quite right-wing themselves. Rather, he was registering their fundamental misunderstanding of his work, which had a mostly melancholy tone and thus did not merit the spirited exuberance of many of its fans. It was a “heroic romance” without a hero, or rather, with so many heroes acting in various uncoordinated ways which ultimately leads to the unexpectedly happy ending, what Tolkien called the eucatastrophe, but which also created a more prosaic world devoid of enchantment in its wake. Tolkien hints throughout The Lord of the Rings at something like Divine Providence, but as Jameson has pointed out, this is ultimately a vision of History itself, hence well suited to a Marxist critical perspective that could “rewrite certain religious concepts — most notably Christian historicism and the ‘concept’ of providence, but also the pretheological systems of primitive magic — as anticipatory foreshadowings of historical materialism.”22Jameson famously asserted that “History is what hurts,” and ultimately, in Tolkien’s own view, The Lord of the Rings is a story about History, the “long defeat” (as Galadriel calls it), which is why even in apparent triumph an aura of mourning and loss is pervasive.

For Tolkien, a conservative Roman Catholic skeptical of modernization in all its vicissitudes, the image of reality in Middle-earth (that is, the world we live in) as the Vale of Tears is understandable. But for those of us who find this world objectionable in other ways, such as in the dominance of the wealthy and powerful over others, might see in the transformation of the social order preferable alternatives. Tolkien, perhaps despite himself, makes possible a vision of a world in which les damnés de la terre du milieu (“the wretched of Middle-earth”) can make for themselves a life worth living. The right-wing embrace of Tolkien is rooted in establishing and maintaining an order that resists change, but even Tolkien knew that change is inevitable. While he may have mourned that fact, Tolkien also opens up the imaginative spaces in which to celebrate its potential for building a better world, a world without “Big Bosses,” as Tolkien allows even his orcs to dream of in The Lord of the Rings.

Tolkien is not himself a Marxist (far from it!), but his work is well suited to a Marxist analysis that may disclose elements of the political unconscious and counter-narratives implicit in the texts, which in turn may stand in opposition to the facile and self-serving misreadings of Tolkien’s right-wing fans. It may not be possible to rescue Tolkien from his far-right admirers, fascist hobbit campers, and palantíri-obsessed corporate Big Brothers, but there is ample space within Tolkien’s own writings for alternative interpretations. The left cannot cede the literature of alterity and of the imagination, of which fantasy in general and Tolkien in particular represent crucial forms, to those on the right who ultimately seek to foreclose the imaginative and the political possibilities available to us. The deplorables who make up Tolkien’s present-day cultus ought not be given the final say in the matter, nor should they be permitted to forge and wield their own rings of power.

Robert T. Tally Jr. is a professor of English at Texas State University. His recent books include The Fiction of Dread: Dystopia, Monstrosity, and Apocalypse (2024), Representing Middle-earth: Tolkien, Form, and Ideology (2024), The Critical Situation: Vexed Perspectives in Postmodern Literary Studies (2023), J. R. R. Tolkien’s ‘The Hobbit’: Realizing History Through Fantasy (2022), and For a Ruthless Critique of All That Exists: Literature in an Age of Capitalist Realism (2022).

  • 1

    Humphrey Carpenter, J. R. R. Tolkien: A Biography (Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 2000), 233.

  • 2

    China Miéville, “Editorial Introduction: Marxism and Fantasy,” Historical Materialism 10, no. 4 (January 2002): 46.

  • 3

    See, for example, John Molyneux, “A Marxist View of Tolkien’s Middle-earth,” Jacobin, January 11, 2023, https://jacobin.com/2023/01/jrr-tolkein-lord-of-the-rings-marxist-critique.

  • 4

    For example, introducing a chapter titled “The Great Schism” in which he distinguishes fantasy from SF, Jameson says, “We must now lay this misunderstanding to rest.” Fredric Jameson, Archaeologies of the Future: The Desire Called Utopia and Other Science Fictions (New York: Verso, 2005), 56.

  • 5

    See Darko Suvin, Metamorphoses of Science Fiction: On the Poetics and History of a Literary Genre, ed. Gerry Canavan (Bern: Peter Lang, 2016), 19–22; Jameson, Archaeologies of the Future, 56–57; and China Miéville, “Cognition as Ideology: A Dialectic of SF Theory,” in Red Planets: Marxism and Science Fiction, eds. Mark Bould and China Miéville (Middletown, Connecticut: Wesleyan University Press, 2009), 231–48.

  • 6

    J. R. R. Tolkien, The Letters of J. R. R. Tolkien:Revised and Expanded Edition, ed. Humphrey Carpenter (New York: William Morrow, 2023), 77.

  • 7

    Ibid., 48.

  • 8

    Robert Stuart, Tolkien, Race, and Racism in Middle-earth (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2022), 237.

  • 9

    Tolkien, Letters, 393.

  • 10

    Tolkien, Letters, 129, 113.

  • 11

    Tolkien, The Hobbit (New York: DelRey, 1982), 62, 60.

  • 12

    Tolkien, Letters, 367.

  • 13

    Adam Wren, “‘Hillbilly Hobbit’: How Lord of the Rings Shaped JD Vance’s Worldview,” Politico, July 19, 2024, https://www.politico.com/news/magazine/2024/07/19/lord-of-the-rings-jd-vance-00169372

  • 14

    Anthony Faiola and Stefano Pitrelli, “Tolkien’s Biggest Fan? Italy’s Giorgia Miloni Opens a New Exhibit,” Washington Post, November, 17, 2023, https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2023/11/16/tolkiens-biggest-fan-italys-giorgia-meloni-opens-new-exhibit/

  • 15

    Jamie Mackay, “How Did The Lord of the Rings Become a Secret Weapon in Italy’s Culture Wars?” Guardian, November, 3, 2023, https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2023/nov/03/the-lord-of-the-rings-italy-giorgia-meloni-tolkien

  • 16

    See, for example, Joel Cornell, “Tolkien the Anarchist: Middle-earth, Chomsky, and the Search for the Everyday Shire,” Culture Crush, February 27, 2020,  https://www.theculturecrush.com/feature/tolkien-the-anarchist.

  • 17

    Tolkien, Letters, 90–91.

  • 18

    Tolkien, Letters, 92.

  • 19

    Tolkien, Letters, 350.

  • 20

    Tolkien, Letters, 468.

  • 21

    I am indebted to Tolkien scholar Craig Franson for his insights into this phenomenon.

  • 22

    Jameson, The Political Unconscious: Narrative as a Socially Symbolic Act (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1981), 285.