Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.
This is a mixed methods study, comprising both qualitative and quantitative material. The aim of this project was to use the opportunity afforded by the release of the final part of the film trilogy of Lord of the Rings to gather materials allowing an exploration ofthe role of fantasy, especially film fantasy, in the lives of different kinds of audiencethe understanding they have of the 'location' (real or imaginary) of the author J.R.R. Tolkien's world, and its relation to their lived worldthe role played in their responses by perceptions of the story's original 'Englishness', its New Zealand landscapes, and its Hollywood financing and marketingthe part played by all kinds of prefigurative processes in shaping responses in advanceWithin these broad aims, the objectives were to gather, over a fifteen month period, three large bodies of materials: three months of marketing, publicity, merchandising, and media coverage of the film prior to its release; responses from across the world to a questionnaire, available online with added paper-completed ones; and a set of follow-up interviews with individuals chosen for their exemplification of emergent patterns. This body of materials and data was to be organised in a way which permits both quantitative and qualitative exploration. The only materials currently deposited at the UK Data Archive (UKDA) are the questionnaire responses, which are held in a Microsoft 'Access 2000' database. Further information about the study may be found at the Lord of the Rings Research Project web site.
Main Topics:
This dataset comprises the full world dataset of completed responses to the project's web-based questionnaire. After cleaning and checking, the dataset comprises 24,739 cases in 26 fields, which combine quantitative (multiple-choice) with qualitative (free text) responses. The questionnaire was made available in fourteen languages. These languages (including, as necessary, their distinctive character sets) are maintained in the free-text fields within the database.
Volunteer sample
Self-completion