Secret Vice. Tolkien on Invented LanguagesХудожественная литература на англ. языке<br>First ever critical study of Tolkien s little-known essay, which reveals how language invention shaped the creation of Middle-earth and beyond, to George R R Martin s Game of Thrones.<br>J.R.R. Tolkien s linguistic invention was a fundamental part of his artistic output, to the extent that later on in life he attributed the existence of his mythology to the desire to give his languages a home and peoples to speak them. As Tolkien puts it in  A Secret Vice ,  the making of language and mythology are related functions  .<br>In the 1930s, Tolkien composed and delivered two lectures, in which he explored these two key elements of his sub-creative methodology. The second of these, the seminal Andrew Lang Lecture for 1938-9,  On Fairy-Stories , which he delivered at the University of St Andrews in Scotland, is well known. But many years before, in 1931, Tolkien gave a talk to a literary society entitled  A Hobby for the Home , where he unveiled for the first time to a listening public the art that he had both himself encountered and been involved with since his earliest childhood:  the construction of imaginary languages in full or outline for amusement .<br>This talk would be edited by Christopher Tolkien for inclusion as  A Secret Vice  in The Monsters and the Critics and Other Essays and serves as the principal exposition of Tolkien s art of inventing languages. This new critical edition, which includes previously unpublished notes and drafts by Tolkien connected with the essay, including his  Essay on Phonetic Symbolism , goes some way towards re-opening the debate on the importance of linguistic invention in Tolkien s mythology and the role of imaginary languages in fantasy literature.<br>