Introduces the concept of “narrative dualism” to understand both Lewis’s technique and his authorial purpose in creating opposing but parallel experiences, motifs, and motivations for Jane and Mark Studdock in That Hideous Strength
Baptism of the Imagination - Harvey Solganick C. S. Lewis read George MacDonald’s Phantases and cla...
Cites examples of Williams’s notions of coinherence and exchange in both his works and those of Lewi...
Compares how the three authors shaped their mythopoeic literature—Tolkien as a true creator, Lewis a...
Although both Orwell and Lewis warned against the evils of totalitarianism in their novels, they did...
Examines how Lewis’s idea of “transposition […] the incorporation of the eternal into the material” ...
Examines the imagined medievalism of Lewis’s That Hideous Strength and the Narnia books, and shows h...
Speculates about reasons for comparative critical neglect of Lewis’s early poetry collection. Discus...
Notes that critics have complained about the “pettiness” of evil characters in Lewis’s works, implyi...
“A look at the specifically Arthurian inspirations behind parts of [That Hideous Strength] [...] how...
Examines the works of Tolkien, Lewis, and Williams for what they have to say about the nature of evi...
C. S. Lewis was a prolific and versatile author who wrote popular theology, literary criticism, and ...
Praises The Great Divorce because in it the two sides of the author—“the atomically rational Lewis a...
Study of symbolism in Till We Have Faces, and its sources in various mystical traditions, alchemy, a...
Discusses Lewis’s theory of mythology as “an intensely Christian one” that is “essential to an under...
Shows how Lewis, in his fiction, “explores the phenomenology of Spirit through his creation of sever...
Baptism of the Imagination - Harvey Solganick C. S. Lewis read George MacDonald’s Phantases and cla...
Cites examples of Williams’s notions of coinherence and exchange in both his works and those of Lewi...
Compares how the three authors shaped their mythopoeic literature—Tolkien as a true creator, Lewis a...
Although both Orwell and Lewis warned against the evils of totalitarianism in their novels, they did...
Examines how Lewis’s idea of “transposition […] the incorporation of the eternal into the material” ...
Examines the imagined medievalism of Lewis’s That Hideous Strength and the Narnia books, and shows h...
Speculates about reasons for comparative critical neglect of Lewis’s early poetry collection. Discus...
Notes that critics have complained about the “pettiness” of evil characters in Lewis’s works, implyi...
“A look at the specifically Arthurian inspirations behind parts of [That Hideous Strength] [...] how...
Examines the works of Tolkien, Lewis, and Williams for what they have to say about the nature of evi...
C. S. Lewis was a prolific and versatile author who wrote popular theology, literary criticism, and ...
Praises The Great Divorce because in it the two sides of the author—“the atomically rational Lewis a...
Study of symbolism in Till We Have Faces, and its sources in various mystical traditions, alchemy, a...
Discusses Lewis’s theory of mythology as “an intensely Christian one” that is “essential to an under...
Shows how Lewis, in his fiction, “explores the phenomenology of Spirit through his creation of sever...
Baptism of the Imagination - Harvey Solganick C. S. Lewis read George MacDonald’s Phantases and cla...
Cites examples of Williams’s notions of coinherence and exchange in both his works and those of Lewi...
Compares how the three authors shaped their mythopoeic literature—Tolkien as a true creator, Lewis a...