<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<records>
<record>
<language>eng</language>
<publisher>Science and Education Publishing</publisher>
<journalTitle>Journal of Linguistics and Literature</journalTitle>
<publicationDate>2022-01-14</publicationDate>
<volume>5</volume>
<issue>1</issue>
<startPage>1</startPage>
<endPage>5</endPage>
<doi>10.12691/jll-5-1-1</doi>
<publisherRecordId>JLL2022511</publisherRecordId>
<documentType>article</documentType>
<title language="eng">Corpus Linguistic Analysis of the Idiolects of Gollum and Sm&#233;agol</title>
<authors>
<author>
<name>Vannessa L. Milom</name>
<email>tess.milom@gmail.com</email>
<affiliationId>1</affiliationId>
</author>
</authors>
<affiliationsList>
<affiliationName affiliationId="1">Seattle, Washington, USA</affiliationName>

</affiliationsList>
<abstract language="eng">The topic of this paper is a linguistic analysis of the speech patterns of Gollum and/or Sm&#233;agol from J. R. R. Tolkien¡¯s Lord of the Rings books. The goal of this research was to apply forensic linguistic methods and corpus analyses to the speech patterns of the characters in order to determine if Tolkien might have designed the idiolect of Gollum-Sm&#233;agol with intention and whether it was crafted with the same professional creativity that he applied to his other fictional languages. The results reveal that Tolkien used orthographic features as a detailed characterization device. The language used by Gollum and Sm&#233;agol was thoughtfully curated to subtly convey information regarding their identity, their motivations, and the progress of their character arc. This aspect of Tolkien¡¯s character writing may be a unique literary device of his own invention.</abstract>
<fullTextUrl format="pdf">http://pubs.sciepub.com/jll/5/1/1/jll-5-1-1.pdf</fullTextUrl>
<keywords language="eng"><keyword>Tolkien</keyword>
<keyword>Lord of the Rings</keyword>
<keyword>Gollum</keyword>
<keyword>corpus analysis</keyword>
<keyword>forensic linguistics</keyword>
<keyword>authorship analysis</keyword>
<keyword>concordance</keyword>
<keyword>keyword analysis</keyword>
</keywords>
</record>
</records>
