Beyond the Brandywine
Tolkien's women move mountains, break curses, and sing gods to sleep — and then the story quietly runs out of road for them. In Fell and Fair: The Women Who Shape Middle-Earth, Kelsey and Angela dig into this pattern, asking not just whether Tolkien's most powerful women are impressive (they obviously are), but what you do with a character who's already done the impossible. From Ungoliant, who terrified Morgoth into screaming for his Balrogs, to Lúthien, who defeated Sauron, broke into Angband, and moved the god of death to pity — these women don't disappear because they're defeated. They leave on their own terms. The episode spans the full arc of the legendarium: Melian's quiet soft power and the kingdom she sustained, Haleth's deep-cut heroism and the only house of men named for a woman, Galadriel's millennia-long ambition and the hardest "no" in Middle-earth, and Éowyn's defining battlefield moment and the thorny question of what comes after. Are Tolkien's women too powerful for their own storylines? Is fading into the West the ultimate power move? Angela and Kelsey make the case that the fate of these characters says more about Tolkien's respect for women than any easy critique gives him credit for.
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