Fan attention has, Karen Viars and Cait Coker write, "unsurprisingly focused on many of those topics
Tolkien scholars are fond of today—homosexual overtones...,
racism...,
Tolkien's literary sources and forebears, and the roles of women in his world." Walls-Thumma surveyed Tolkien fan fiction writers' attitudes, finding that 62% agreed that their writing helped them to "correct problems with race, gender, and sexuality that I see in Tolkien's books". Respondents with less than 2 years' experience of writing were the most likely (69.6%) to agree with the statement.
Robin Anne Reid suggests that fan fiction like Thorinsmut's Free Orcs
alternate universe effectively "writes back to Tolkien's construction of Orcs", offering a non-racist perspective on these beings. Reid comments that the effect is to make the story into one about relationships between Dwarves and Orcs, from the cultural and personal through to politics and trade.
Sexuality Anna Smol notes that the "enormous outpouring of fan fiction and fan art" has greatly increased discussion of sexuality in
The Lord of the Rings. Tolkien's account of the male intimacy between Frodo and Sam, mirroring
his wartime experience of the officer-
batman relationship, has, Smol writes, "provoke[d] an active engagement with the story that can lead to a questioning of ideas about adult male and female sexuality, heroic masculinity, and the possibilities for male intimacy." She adds that such engagement can equally be through fan fiction. This may help in promoting tolerance of homosexuality, though she notes that Tolkien fan fiction's heterosexual female authors may be "expressing their own sexual desires through their identification with attractive male characters". Between July and September 2020, the cartoonist
Lee Knox Ostertag published an illustrated fan fiction story about Frodo and Sam, called "In All the Ways There Were".
Lives of minor female characters by Tolkien has enabled fans to imagine her as they like. Fan portrait by Gregor Roffalski, 2008 The small amount of detail about several of
Tolkien's female characters has left much of the backstory of these women as a blank canvas, allowing fans to reimagine Middle-earth's women as they like. Much attention has been given to
Rosie Cotton, Sam's girlfriend. Some fans explore what Amy Sturgis categorises as "Rosie the healer and helpmeet". Others look at what Sturgis names "Rosie the sensual hobbit", adventurous in the bedroom, with the possibility that Sam is at the same time involved sexually with Frodo, and indeed that Rosie too has other lovers, making her relationship with Sam symmetrical. The "Pretty Good Year" series features
polyamory with Rosie, Sam, and Frodo. Yet another strand named by Sturgis sees Rosie as a "vampire hobbit" who has supernatural powers, sometimes by wielding the
One Ring. Other storytellers have worked from the small hints provided by Tolkien about women such as Finduilas,
Denethor's wife who "died untimely", or Ioreth, the talkative woman in
Gondor's House of Healing.
Una McCormack notes that Ioreth is a servant, a working-class woman, the kind of person missing from Tolkien's recorded history. When women write about such characters, in her view, they "perform acts of transformation, reparation, and radicalization on
The Lord of the Rings, establishing female presences, queer presences, and urban working class presences, in a text chiefly concerned with the masculine and
the heroic". Some fans have developed the Appendices-only
Lord of the Rings character
Lothíriel, wife of
Éomer. Since Tolkien has said so little about her, she forms, in Viars and Coker's words, "the perfect space for the fan writer to play in Middle-earth", since "she may be beautiful or plain, clever or foolish, obedient or rebellious", according to the writer's taste. They note that fan versions of Lothíriel often render her either as a "contemporary romance novel heroine", or as a "neo-Victorian".
Non-canonical characters The simplest way to compensate for the lack of women is to invent some. McCormack suggests that in this way the fan fiction writer "is arguably reinscribing a history that has somehow been lost in translation or transmission", since, according to fan fiction writer Firerose, the civilisations of Middle-earth could not have survived with the sex ratios that Tolkien documents for the noble families in the Appendices. Firerose's story "Missing" creates Lóriniel, younger sister of
Faramir, whose short and tragic life ends during the time described in
The Lord of the Rings. Faramir discovers from scraps and small clues that his father Denethor, mad with grief and despair, "has turned to Lóriniel for sexual comfort, eliding wife and daughter." Sirpa Leppänen writes that some women intentionally compensate for the paucity of women in Tolkien. She gives as example the story
Letters from Bree by Arwen Imladviel, in which Estella Brandybuck brushes her adopted daughter Eowyn "of Brandy Hall"'s hair: she isn't surnamed Brandybuck as she was born out of wedlock. Leppänen comments that the female author skilfully imitates
Tolkien's prose style, but creates a "much more diffuse" narrative with female characters who lead domestic lives and conduct "personal and intimate discussions with each other", in marked contrast to Tolkien's epic narrative and "heroic adventures". The creation of new, "original" or non-canonical characters, McCormack writes, brings dangers; one is that fan fiction groups especially despise so-called "
Mary Sue" characters. These represent wished-for personalities of their authors, and are accordingly unnaturally perfect and idealised. Yet another genre is "Middle-earth tourism",
escapist fantasy in which someone is transported from normal life into an adventure in the imagined world. == Validity ==