| The funny thing is the local communist newspaper "Red Truth" (as if there were non-communist ones, ...) published a review of LOTR in 1977, in which they pretty much took the side of the Mordor. (It might be a made-up joke from the 90s, but the spirit of absurdity is spot on for 1977.) The reasoning was roughly: * Mordor is obviously meant to be USSR, as it's in the east. * The orcs are clearly heavy industry workers, building the world of future. * Bilbo is obviously a son from a bourgeoisie family, disgusted by hard work. * The west is represented by elves = aristocracy, people = bourgeoisie, hobbits = landowners. * The group of reactionaries are afraid of a made up "threat from the east", led by Gandalf. * Gandalf = a reactionary ideologue, keeping people in state of fear of progress and knowledge. * Saruman = protector of the oppressed, declared a traitor and destroyed by the reactionaries. * But socialism can't be destroyed by throwing something in the fire. All the power to Mordor, surrounded by reactionary neighbors. |
See from example https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Last_Ringbearer as perhaps the most famous from the genre