Looks at women in the novels of Charles Williams from the perspective of feminism, especially feminist theology. Finds a wide range of female characters at various stages of spiritual development, androgyny and inclusiveness in regard to God
Recounts the experiences of eight women (including the author) who knew C.S. Lewis
Supplemented by C.S. Lewis\u27 works in theology, predominately Mere Christianity, and \u27Priestess...
Argues that Le Guin has created in “Sur” a “myth of women explorers, a myth of female heroes.” Contr...
Discusses the strong female characters in Eddison’s novels as personifications of the Jungian anima,...
Presents “those chauvinistic elements which have irritated so many women” who encounter Lewis’s work...
The powerful, learned woman is a figure of fear in the works of Williams, seen as transgressing her ...
Asserts that “Doris Lessing’s naming of her book and its protagonist was both intentional and ironic...
Discusses elements of myth and fantasy in the works of five contemporary women poets. Notes the use ...
Edited transcript of a panel discussion (including audience contributions) at the 17th Mythopoeic So...
Discusses Williams’s ideas of exchange and coinherence in relation to community, particularly church...
Explores the interaction of Masculine and Feminine principles (gender as opposed to sex) in Tolkien’...
Offers an opposing viewpoint on the “taming” of the woman warrior in Tolkien, suggesting that Éowyn’...
Discusses examples of women as creators (in the artistic and/or intellectual sense) and as inspirati...
My dissertation, Cauldron of Changes: Feminist Spirituality in Contemporary American Women\u27s Fict...
Marion Zimmer Bradley\u27s The Mists of Avalon has become one of the very important landmarks and ba...
Recounts the experiences of eight women (including the author) who knew C.S. Lewis
Supplemented by C.S. Lewis\u27 works in theology, predominately Mere Christianity, and \u27Priestess...
Argues that Le Guin has created in “Sur” a “myth of women explorers, a myth of female heroes.” Contr...
Discusses the strong female characters in Eddison’s novels as personifications of the Jungian anima,...
Presents “those chauvinistic elements which have irritated so many women” who encounter Lewis’s work...
The powerful, learned woman is a figure of fear in the works of Williams, seen as transgressing her ...
Asserts that “Doris Lessing’s naming of her book and its protagonist was both intentional and ironic...
Discusses elements of myth and fantasy in the works of five contemporary women poets. Notes the use ...
Edited transcript of a panel discussion (including audience contributions) at the 17th Mythopoeic So...
Discusses Williams’s ideas of exchange and coinherence in relation to community, particularly church...
Explores the interaction of Masculine and Feminine principles (gender as opposed to sex) in Tolkien’...
Offers an opposing viewpoint on the “taming” of the woman warrior in Tolkien, suggesting that Éowyn’...
Discusses examples of women as creators (in the artistic and/or intellectual sense) and as inspirati...
My dissertation, Cauldron of Changes: Feminist Spirituality in Contemporary American Women\u27s Fict...
Marion Zimmer Bradley\u27s The Mists of Avalon has become one of the very important landmarks and ba...
Recounts the experiences of eight women (including the author) who knew C.S. Lewis
Supplemented by C.S. Lewis\u27 works in theology, predominately Mere Christianity, and \u27Priestess...
Argues that Le Guin has created in “Sur” a “myth of women explorers, a myth of female heroes.” Contr...