Notes that critics have complained about the “pettiness” of evil characters in Lewis’s works, implying that Lewis was unable to create evil characters of “abstract grandeur.” Argues that Lewis’s decision was “a conscious philosopher’s choice.
Notes similarities between Lewis’s Space Trilogy and L’Engle’s Wrinkle in Time trilogy
A study of ecological themes in Lewis’s Space Trilogy which concludes that Lewis was not (as many as...
Presents “those chauvinistic elements which have irritated so many women” who encounter Lewis’s work...
Discusses Lewis’s theory of mythology as “an intensely Christian one” that is “essential to an under...
Examines the works of Tolkien, Lewis, and Williams for what they have to say about the nature of evi...
Speculates about reasons for comparative critical neglect of Lewis’s early poetry collection. Discus...
Praises The Great Divorce because in it the two sides of the author—“the atomically rational Lewis a...
Although both Orwell and Lewis warned against the evils of totalitarianism in their novels, they did...
Counters criticism of fantasy as morally negligible or as leading to morbid escapism; instead applie...
Contends that Lewis’s distinction between Milton the private man and epic, or public, poet can be ap...
Despite the fact that Lewis viewed pride as “the central issue in Christian morality” and it is a gr...
Compares how the three authors shaped their mythopoeic literature—Tolkien as a true creator, Lewis a...
Cites examples of Williams’s notions of coinherence and exchange in both his works and those of Lewi...
Introduces the concept of “narrative dualism” to understand both Lewis’s technique and his authorial...
The Politics of Fantasy: C.S. Lewis and J.R.R. Tolkien. Lee D. Rossi. Reviewed by David Bratman. Sh...
Notes similarities between Lewis’s Space Trilogy and L’Engle’s Wrinkle in Time trilogy
A study of ecological themes in Lewis’s Space Trilogy which concludes that Lewis was not (as many as...
Presents “those chauvinistic elements which have irritated so many women” who encounter Lewis’s work...
Discusses Lewis’s theory of mythology as “an intensely Christian one” that is “essential to an under...
Examines the works of Tolkien, Lewis, and Williams for what they have to say about the nature of evi...
Speculates about reasons for comparative critical neglect of Lewis’s early poetry collection. Discus...
Praises The Great Divorce because in it the two sides of the author—“the atomically rational Lewis a...
Although both Orwell and Lewis warned against the evils of totalitarianism in their novels, they did...
Counters criticism of fantasy as morally negligible or as leading to morbid escapism; instead applie...
Contends that Lewis’s distinction between Milton the private man and epic, or public, poet can be ap...
Despite the fact that Lewis viewed pride as “the central issue in Christian morality” and it is a gr...
Compares how the three authors shaped their mythopoeic literature—Tolkien as a true creator, Lewis a...
Cites examples of Williams’s notions of coinherence and exchange in both his works and those of Lewi...
Introduces the concept of “narrative dualism” to understand both Lewis’s technique and his authorial...
The Politics of Fantasy: C.S. Lewis and J.R.R. Tolkien. Lee D. Rossi. Reviewed by David Bratman. Sh...
Notes similarities between Lewis’s Space Trilogy and L’Engle’s Wrinkle in Time trilogy
A study of ecological themes in Lewis’s Space Trilogy which concludes that Lewis was not (as many as...
Presents “those chauvinistic elements which have irritated so many women” who encounter Lewis’s work...