Cites examples of Williams’s notions of coinherence and exchange in both his works and those of Lewis
Contends that Lewis’s distinction between Milton the private man and epic, or public, poet can be ap...
Discusses Moorman’s work, which analyzes how Arthurian legend is treated by Charles Williams, T.S. E...
Studies the process of creating fantasy worlds, or sub-creation, with observations from several auth...
Compares how the three authors shaped their mythopoeic literature—Tolkien as a true creator, Lewis a...
Examines Williams’s conceptions of coinherence, exchange, and substitution as they are portrayed in ...
Discusses Williams’s ideas of exchange and coinherence in relation to community, particularly church...
Discusses Lewis’s theory of mythology as “an intensely Christian one” that is “essential to an under...
Praises The Great Divorce because in it the two sides of the author—“the atomically rational Lewis a...
Notes that critics have complained about the “pettiness” of evil characters in Lewis’s works, implyi...
Speculates about reasons for comparative critical neglect of Lewis’s early poetry collection. Discus...
Examines why Williams chose to use the Arthurian materials in his poetry, and analyzes at greater le...
Relates Islamic and Jewish creation stories to the Stone of King Solomon (the Shekinah) in Many Dime...
Asserts that Lewis and MacDonald wrote books not for children but for the childlike in all. Distingu...
Detailed analysis of the symbolism and character of Williams’s Arthurian poems, which are “about the...
Notes known connections to Lewis and Williams on Sayers’s part (through the evidence of letters). Sp...
Contends that Lewis’s distinction between Milton the private man and epic, or public, poet can be ap...
Discusses Moorman’s work, which analyzes how Arthurian legend is treated by Charles Williams, T.S. E...
Studies the process of creating fantasy worlds, or sub-creation, with observations from several auth...
Compares how the three authors shaped their mythopoeic literature—Tolkien as a true creator, Lewis a...
Examines Williams’s conceptions of coinherence, exchange, and substitution as they are portrayed in ...
Discusses Williams’s ideas of exchange and coinherence in relation to community, particularly church...
Discusses Lewis’s theory of mythology as “an intensely Christian one” that is “essential to an under...
Praises The Great Divorce because in it the two sides of the author—“the atomically rational Lewis a...
Notes that critics have complained about the “pettiness” of evil characters in Lewis’s works, implyi...
Speculates about reasons for comparative critical neglect of Lewis’s early poetry collection. Discus...
Examines why Williams chose to use the Arthurian materials in his poetry, and analyzes at greater le...
Relates Islamic and Jewish creation stories to the Stone of King Solomon (the Shekinah) in Many Dime...
Asserts that Lewis and MacDonald wrote books not for children but for the childlike in all. Distingu...
Detailed analysis of the symbolism and character of Williams’s Arthurian poems, which are “about the...
Notes known connections to Lewis and Williams on Sayers’s part (through the evidence of letters). Sp...
Contends that Lewis’s distinction between Milton the private man and epic, or public, poet can be ap...
Discusses Moorman’s work, which analyzes how Arthurian legend is treated by Charles Williams, T.S. E...
Studies the process of creating fantasy worlds, or sub-creation, with observations from several auth...