New Challenge: Potluck Bingo
Sit down to a delicious selection of prompts served on bingo boards, created by the SWG community.
Posted by SWG Moderators on 17 June 2023. Last updated on 14 July 2023.
Sherlock Holmes. Miss Marple. Lieutenant Columbo. Kurt Wallander. Benoit Blanc. Your preferred sleuth may vary, but there’s nothing like a good whodunnit. From the most arcane puzzle to the easiest open and shut case, all mystery novels require certain basic elements. This month’s challenge is a Matryoshka that presents you with the building blocks of a mystery novel. When requesting your prompts, make sure to specify the difficulty level you would like: Beginner (2 prompts), Easy (3 prompts), Medium (5 prompts), or Difficult (7 prompts). Contact the mods to request a prompt set or sets.
While the prompts are elements of a mystery, your fanwork does not need to be a mystery—use the prompts as you see fit. As June is Pride month, we have a special stamp for fanworks featuring LGBTQ+ characters.
In order to receive a stamp for your fanwork, your response must be posted to the archive on or before 15 July 2023. For complete challenge guidelines, see the Challenges page on our website.
Many thanks to Varda delle Stelle for this month's lovely set of stamps!
Posted by SWG Moderators on 3 June 2023. Last updated on 1 July 2023.
Throughout the legendarium, characters are called to bear up under extreme pressures exerted by forces of evil. We see, mostly in the Third Age Lord of the Rings, characters like Aragorn and Éowyn and Samwise whose steadfastness, loyalty, and courage approaches the superhuman, as well as tragic antiheroes (mostly in the First and Second Ages) like Fëanor and Maeglin whose life circumstances seem to funnel them into an inevitable fall to ruin.
In this month's character biography, Melesta makes the case that Húrin serves as a precursor to those valiant Third Age heroes while retaining "the tragic elements that define the major tales of the First Age." After all, Húrin's story is far from eucatastrophic.
But this month's biography, the first of two parts, focuses on the earlier events of Húrin's life, when he was a hope-filled hero in whom we see glimmers of the character of Aragorn. In addition to reviewing what we know of the canon of Húrin's early life (which is complex, as Húrin is one of Tolkien's earliest characters and therefore manifests from a labyrinthine collection of texts and drafts), Melesta discusses some of the connections between Húrin and the Edain with ancient and medieval history and what these can reveal of culture and theme.
You can read Part One of Melesta's biography of Húrin Thalion here.
Posted by SWG Moderators on 28 May 2023. Last updated on 1 July 2023.
For the past several weeks, our draft artificial intelligence (AI) policy has been open for comment and discussion over email and in the #town-hall channel of our Discord. Many thanks to those who contributed to the discussion; much of the feedback we received has been incorporated into the final policy, and the various perspectives and expertise you all were willing to share with us was appreciated as we navigated this complex issue. (The drafts of and documentation of changes to the policy can be found on the Wayback Machine here, under May 14, 21, and 28.)
You can read our finalized AI policy here.
We've also added two new FAQs to our site:
As always, contact the mods with any questions!
Posted by SWG Moderators on 27 May 2023. Last updated on 17 June 2023.
The SWG is a group that was built for fanworks creators, so if you are reading this, you've probably had the experience of sitting down to work on a Tolkien-based fanwork and being confronted with the issue of canon. What even is canon, in a corpus that includes dozens of volumes, works in various states of completion, and uncounted contradictions? How do you choose which canon to use? How can canon be used (and defied) as a creative choice? When is it okay to leave canon aside?
Fandom Voices is a project that is part of the monthly fandom studies column Cultus Dispatches in which Tolkien fans get to share their experiences and perspectives on a topic related to the fandom and its history. For the past two months, we've considered the question of canon through the responses of fans who participated in our survey on defining and using canon. Last month's column considered how Tolkien fans define canon. This month's looks at the use of canon to make fanworks.
You can read the second part of "Fandom Voices: Defining Canon and Using Canon in Fanworks" here.
Also note that our Fandom Voices surveys never close. If you didn't get a chance to share your views and want to, it is not too late! We will continue to add new responses to the collection as they come in (including pulling from new responses for the second part of the article. You can respond to the "Defining Canon" survey here.
Finally, we are in the midst of a series of Cultus Dispatches articles focusing on canon in the Tolkien fandom. Cultus Dispatches is always open to contributions from all members of the fandom, so if you know of a creator or fanwork that takes an interesting approach to canon, or if you have another idea related to canon and fandom, contact our moderators and pitch your idea! Our reference editors will support new researchers and writers through the process, so don't let unfamiliarity with research writing dissuade you from sharing your ideas with us.
Posted by SWG Moderators on 15 May 2023. Last updated on 17 June 2023.
Beasts and animals are a central part of the legendarium. They are faithful companions, frightening foes, or the alter-egos of shape-shifters. They are heroes, villains, and literally overhead and underfoot, contributing to the sights, sounds, and smells of Arda.
For this challenge, we consider the many animals that appear in Tolkien's works (or would have likely existed in Arda). We've put together a "bestiary" full of image and music prompts related to animals. You can select whichever prompt(s) you want for this month's challenge, and as always, any part of the prompt is fair game. (The song's title? That weird-looking thing in the background? The artist's intriguing signature??) Your fanwork does not need to include the animal featured in your prompt or any animal at all.
Find challenge prompts on the "Bestiary of Arda" challenge page.
In order to receive a stamp for your fanwork, your response must be posted to the archive on or before 15 June 2023. For complete challenge guidelines, see the Challenges page on our website.
This month's banner and stamps were made by Anérea.
Posted by SWG Moderators on 13 May 2023. Last updated on 27 May 2023.
As artificial intelligence (AI) is rapidly evolving, we wanted to be sure the position of our group on AI is clearly expressed. The SWG moderators have put together a draft AI policy, which we are opening for comment through 26 May 2023.
Share any comments, questions, or concerns about the draft AI policy on the #town-hall channel on the SWG Discord or by emailing the moderators.
Posted by SWG Moderators on 5 May 2023. Last updated on 3 June 2023.
Tar-Míriel is a tragic figure. That seems almost an understatement. As Grundy explains in this month's Character of the Month biography, "The most written of Míriel besides the facts of her birth, forced marriage, and usurpation is the description of her death."
As the (unwilling) wife of Ar-Pharazôn, Míriel had a ringside seat to some of the key events in one of the most cataclysmic episodes in the legendarium: the downfall of Númenor. Yet we hear remarkably little from her. Nonetheless, despite the minimal page-time she receives, she remains one of the more intriguing characters of the Second Age to fanworks creators. (We have more than fifty fanworks about Tar-Míriel here on the SWG!) This month's biography details her tragic life, considers the broader context in which she lives, and explores the textual history of her inclusion in the legendarium.
Posted by SWG Moderators on 29 April 2023. Last updated on 14 July 2023.
Busymagpie's art shows eloquent and expressive character portraits, most often depicting characters in moments of comfort and bliss. In this month's Tolkien Fanartics column, Anérea interviewed Busymagpie about her work: her approach to art, her evolution as an artist, and of course, her OTP, Maedhros/Fingon, all accompanied by a selection of her work.
Having started serious work on her art at the age of fourteen, Busymagpie has been drawing every day ever since. Mostly self-taught, she says of her work, "Art, and fanart in particular, is a way for me to tell stories." And her work does exactly that. Whether a cozy family gathering, a tender moment between a couple, or sometimes something spicer, her grasp of character and expression brings Silmarillion characters to life on the screen.
Posted by SWG Moderators on 26 April 2023. Last updated on 13 May 2023.
The Second Age is receiving renewed interest in the Tolkien fandom, and we are pleased to offer a fanfiction book club for discussing stories focusing on the Second Age. The book club will be held on April 29 and April 30 in time slots from 12:00 til 21:00 UTC. Discussions are held on the #fanfiction-book-club channel on our Discord server. Stories should be set to at least 75 percent in the Second Age, and be no more than 5,000 words long. It is acceptable to submit a single chapter from a longer story. We'll discuss each story for about one hour.
Sign-ups are now closed! See below for the discussion schedule.
Your mods for this event are daughterofshadows (@Shadow) and maglor-my-beloved (@maglor-my-beloved).
You can participate in the discussions without signing up as an author if you prefer—there's no need to submit the form, and no minimum time commitment. We will post the schedule here as soon as it is available.
If you've never participated in one of our fanfiction book clubs before, our book club FAQ has more information. If you're not a member of our Discord server, you can join by using the invite link in the site footer (logged-in SWG members only) or email the SWG mods for an invite.
If you need to convert UTC to your timezone, you can do so here.
14:00 UTC: Yávië by AdmirableMonster
15:00 UTC: Send in the Clowns by Himring
16:00 UTC: I promise you I'm not broken by maglor_my_beloved
- break -
18:00 UTC: for Stargazer by elennalore
19:00 UTC: Stay, Forever by Melesta
20:00 UTC: Through Valleys We Can't Walk Alone by Drag0nst0rm (this fic contains discussions of Death, but no deaths on screen)
21:00 UTC: Submerged by silver, decayed by delusion (Chapter 3) by tomefaired
19:00 UTC: Find your roots and grow (Chapter 1) by Shadow/daughterofshadows
20:00 UTC: Elegy of Numenor Volume 1 (Chapter 6, "A Wolf in the Wain") by elfscribe (While this chapter is SFW, the whole work isn't. Mind the warnings.)
21:00 UTC: Midsummer Memories by Zhie (Zhie welcomes both critical and constructive feedback on this piece)
Posted by SWG Moderators on 22 April 2023. Last updated on 27 May 2023.
Tolkien's canon is complicated. That's an understatement. There are dozens of books presenting multiple versions—some of them contradictory, difficult to date, and sometimes hard to even read—and that's before one considers the many adaptations, fanworks and fan interpretations, scholarship, and myriad other "takes" on Middle-earth.
This month's Cultus Dispatches column is one of our Fandom Voices columns, where we present a question or two to the community in an attempt to capture a range of fan experiences with a topic. We asked participants how they define canon and, if they make fanworks, how they use that canon in their fanworks. We received a record number of responses, many of them going into great depth, and so will be dividing this iteration of Fandom Voices into two columns, beginning with how fans define Tolkien's canon. However, you can read all of the responses now.
How Tolkien fans define canon mirrors the complexity of the canon itself. We agree on very little (although many people noted the value of different approaches and the importance of tolerance), but the result is a decades-strong fandom where vibrant discussion and creative interpretation of the legendarium have lulled but never completely ceased. Respondents wrangled with how to handle the canon's many contradictions, the place of Christopher Tolkien's editorial work, the historical and mythical framework of the legendarium and the impact of that approach, and where adaptations and fanworks belong in terms of canon, among many other issues raised and discussed.
You can read the first part of "Fandom Voices: Defining Canon and Using Canon in Fanworks" here.
Also note that our Fandom Voices surveys never close. If you didn't get a chance to share your views and want to, it is not too late! We will continue to add new responses to the collection as they come in (including pulling from new responses for the second part of the article. You can respond to the "Defining Canon" survey here.
Finally, we are in the midst of a series of Cultus Dispatches articles focusing on canon in the Tolkien fandom. Cultus Dispatches is always open to contributions from all members of the fandom, so if you know of a creator or fanwork that takes an interesting approach to canon, or if you have another idea related to canon and fandom, contact our moderators and pitch your idea! Our reference editors will support new researchers and writers through the process, so don't let unfamiliarity with research writing dissuade you from sharing your ideas with us.