Argues a possible derivation of the name Narnia from Old and Middle Irish sources; concludes Lewis was not likely aware of these Irish names, but Narnia was influenced by Lewis’s experience of Ireland
Because of Lewis’s typological approach to his use of sources, it is possible to see Aslan not just ...
ompares the geography of Middle-earth, Narnia, and Oz, their inhabitants’ contrasting isolationist o...
Looks at influence of World War I in Lewis’s autobiography and on war in Narnia, correcting mistaken...
Reacting to a description of Narnia as analogous to Southern France, argues that “for Lewis, the way...
The aim of this article is to present a variety of inspirations and reception of ancient myths that ...
The Antrim Coast of Northern Ireland is traditionally recognized as an influence on the fictional, i...
Notes how the names of people and things in Narnia are well-chosen to establish character and settin...
Examines the imagined medievalism of Lewis’s That Hideous Strength and the Narnia books, and shows h...
Proposes an intriguing solution to the question of Tolkien and Lewis’s estrangement in 1949: that it...
Shows how the medieval model which Lewis articulated in The Discarded Image influenced both the Spac...
Responds to a critique that his Planet Narnia thesis does not take into account Lewis’s letter to La...
Part two is an overview of the geography of Narnia based on textual clues and maps. Speculates on th...
The Chronicles of Narnia are some of C.S. Lewis’s most beloved books, but how did they come about an...
Contends that the origin of the name “Narnia” is to be found in classical Latin literature, where it...
Examines the image of the enclosed garden and pool at the top of a mountain as it occurs in Dante’s ...
Because of Lewis’s typological approach to his use of sources, it is possible to see Aslan not just ...
ompares the geography of Middle-earth, Narnia, and Oz, their inhabitants’ contrasting isolationist o...
Looks at influence of World War I in Lewis’s autobiography and on war in Narnia, correcting mistaken...
Reacting to a description of Narnia as analogous to Southern France, argues that “for Lewis, the way...
The aim of this article is to present a variety of inspirations and reception of ancient myths that ...
The Antrim Coast of Northern Ireland is traditionally recognized as an influence on the fictional, i...
Notes how the names of people and things in Narnia are well-chosen to establish character and settin...
Examines the imagined medievalism of Lewis’s That Hideous Strength and the Narnia books, and shows h...
Proposes an intriguing solution to the question of Tolkien and Lewis’s estrangement in 1949: that it...
Shows how the medieval model which Lewis articulated in The Discarded Image influenced both the Spac...
Responds to a critique that his Planet Narnia thesis does not take into account Lewis’s letter to La...
Part two is an overview of the geography of Narnia based on textual clues and maps. Speculates on th...
The Chronicles of Narnia are some of C.S. Lewis’s most beloved books, but how did they come about an...
Contends that the origin of the name “Narnia” is to be found in classical Latin literature, where it...
Examines the image of the enclosed garden and pool at the top of a mountain as it occurs in Dante’s ...
Because of Lewis’s typological approach to his use of sources, it is possible to see Aslan not just ...
ompares the geography of Middle-earth, Narnia, and Oz, their inhabitants’ contrasting isolationist o...
Looks at influence of World War I in Lewis’s autobiography and on war in Narnia, correcting mistaken...