The E. L. F. publishes two journals,
Vinyar Tengwar, edited by Hostetter, and
Parma Eldalamberon, edited by Christopher Gilson. There is an online journal,
Tengwestië, edited by Hostetter and Patrick H. Wynne; and it sponsors the
Lambengolmor (Quenya: "loremasters") mailing list.
Parma Eldalamberon Parma Eldalamberon (broken
Quenya for 'The Book of Elven-tongues') was founded in 1971 as a fanzine devoted to a variety of invented
literary languages, initially published under the auspices of the
Mythopoeic Society, and then taken over by the Elvish Linguistic Fellowship. In 1995, with the support of Christopher Tolkien and permission of the
Tolkien Estate,
Parma was reinvented as a series of standalone volumes publishing in full material from Tolkien's manuscripts relating to languages and scripts. Much of this material was previously unpublished or published only in heavily edited form. For example, selections from the "Gnomish Lexicon", published in full in
Parma Eldalamberon #11, were published in the Appendices to
The Book of Lost Tales.
Vinyar Tengwar Vinyar Tengwar (broken Quenya for "News Letters") is a refereed journal () published by the Elvish Linguistic Fellowship, dedicated to the study of the
languages constructed by J. R. R. Tolkien. The publication is indexed by the
Modern Language Association.
Vinyar Tengwar first appeared in 1988, at first edited by Jorge Quiñónez and later taken over by Hostetter. It appeared in bimonthly intervals at first, but after July 1994, issues appeared more irregularly, roughly once a year, until #49 appeared in June 2007; The journal was dedicated primarily to the editing of
Tolkien's linguistic texts, some of which were mentioned in volumes of
The History of Middle-earth, edited by Christopher Tolkien, but not published in that series owing to their specialist nature.
Tengwestië Tengwestië is the E.L.F.'s online journal. Its editors are Carl F. Hostetter and Patrick H. Wynne. Articles have appeared intermittently.
ELFcon The ELFcon was the annual open conference of the E.L.F., held from 1991 to 1994. Its purpose was to present scholarly papers on any subject relating to Tolkien's invented languages, to discuss the papers amongst the attendees, and to serve as a friendly gathering for a common intellectual pursuit. ELFcons ended in 1994, but
Tolkienist conventions organized by Bill Welden continued, renamed to
Omentielva, Its proceedings are published in
Arda Philology. == Notes ==