Examines MacDonald’s critique of capitalism in Lilith as well as its spiritual and psychological elements—especially the theme of dying-to-self
Mythprint is the monthly bulletin of the Mythopoeic Society, a nonprofit educational organization de...
George MacDonald: Divine Carelessness and Fairytale Levity. Daniel Gabelman. Reviewed by Bonnie Gaa...
Considers MacDonald a more modern and self-reflexive fantasist then previously recognized. Believes ...
Sees MacDonald’s writing as a dialectic about “the conflict between what is and what seems to be.” S...
Sees MacDonald’s writing as a dialectic about “the conflict between what is and what seems to be.” S...
Sees MacDonald’s writing as a dialectic about “the conflict between what is and what seems to be.” S...
book review of George MacDonald’s Children’s Fantasies and the Divine Imagination by Colin Manlov
Scholars and storytellers alike have deemed George MacDonald a great mythopoeic writer, an exemplar ...
A study of the Wise Woman, Mother, or Grandmother figure throughout George MacDonald’s fantasy. Disc...
Recounts the origins of the legend of Lilith, and gives examples of the use of Lilith figures by a n...
Sees Lilith as important influence on Lewis’s Till We Have Faces, especially the “spiritual implicat...
This study has examined George MacDonald’s first fantasy novel for adults, Phantastes(1858)and “The ...
This article analyzes George MacDonald’s realist novels. It looks at how David Elginbrod, Alec Forbe...
The paper discusses the ideas of George MacDonald and J.R.R. Tolkien on Faërie and Fairy Stories, ba...
About thirty members from both Societies attended an enjoyable and rewarding one day conference on S...
Mythprint is the monthly bulletin of the Mythopoeic Society, a nonprofit educational organization de...
George MacDonald: Divine Carelessness and Fairytale Levity. Daniel Gabelman. Reviewed by Bonnie Gaa...
Considers MacDonald a more modern and self-reflexive fantasist then previously recognized. Believes ...
Sees MacDonald’s writing as a dialectic about “the conflict between what is and what seems to be.” S...
Sees MacDonald’s writing as a dialectic about “the conflict between what is and what seems to be.” S...
Sees MacDonald’s writing as a dialectic about “the conflict between what is and what seems to be.” S...
book review of George MacDonald’s Children’s Fantasies and the Divine Imagination by Colin Manlov
Scholars and storytellers alike have deemed George MacDonald a great mythopoeic writer, an exemplar ...
A study of the Wise Woman, Mother, or Grandmother figure throughout George MacDonald’s fantasy. Disc...
Recounts the origins of the legend of Lilith, and gives examples of the use of Lilith figures by a n...
Sees Lilith as important influence on Lewis’s Till We Have Faces, especially the “spiritual implicat...
This study has examined George MacDonald’s first fantasy novel for adults, Phantastes(1858)and “The ...
This article analyzes George MacDonald’s realist novels. It looks at how David Elginbrod, Alec Forbe...
The paper discusses the ideas of George MacDonald and J.R.R. Tolkien on Faërie and Fairy Stories, ba...
About thirty members from both Societies attended an enjoyable and rewarding one day conference on S...
Mythprint is the monthly bulletin of the Mythopoeic Society, a nonprofit educational organization de...
George MacDonald: Divine Carelessness and Fairytale Levity. Daniel Gabelman. Reviewed by Bonnie Gaa...
Considers MacDonald a more modern and self-reflexive fantasist then previously recognized. Believes ...