Notes the importance of imagery to Williams, and shows how The Place of the Lion presents “three basic ways of how imagery is used and various examples of each way”: perversion, affirmation, and rejection. Charts
Provides a grounding in Charles Williams’s “romantic theology,” which was heavily indebted to his re...
Deals with Lewis’s use of medieval legends and religious symbolism of the unicorn in two versions of...
Detailed analysis of the symbolism and character of Williams’s Arthurian poems, which are “about the...
Notes the importance of imagery to Williams, and shows how The Place of the Lion presents “three bas...
Considers why Williams refers to a non-existent Gnostic tradition in a conversation between Anthony ...
Study of Williams’s symbolic portrayal of the Kingdom of God in All Hallows’ Eve. Discusses coinhere...
Outlines the geography of the Empire in Williams’s Arthuriad, and the symbolic meaning of its parts
Believes that Williams frequently used symbols related to the liturgical year of the Anglican Church...
Argues that Williams, in recasting the Grail legend into his own Christian metaphysics, used the thr...
In this analysis of a poem from Charles Williams’s Taliessin cycle, Taliessin in the Rose-Garden, I ...
Notes similarities between the angelicals that appear in The Place of the Lion and the Gnostic archo...
Discusses the medieval theological concepts of affirmation of images (romantic, seeking truth reflec...
I was introduced to the many stories of Arthur when I was a small child. I used to imagine myself as...
Religious and philosophical discussion on the nature of angels, particularly as portrayed by Lewis, ...
Charles Williams (1886-1945) devoted his life to “the Matter of Britain,” seen in a private scrapboo...
Provides a grounding in Charles Williams’s “romantic theology,” which was heavily indebted to his re...
Deals with Lewis’s use of medieval legends and religious symbolism of the unicorn in two versions of...
Detailed analysis of the symbolism and character of Williams’s Arthurian poems, which are “about the...
Notes the importance of imagery to Williams, and shows how The Place of the Lion presents “three bas...
Considers why Williams refers to a non-existent Gnostic tradition in a conversation between Anthony ...
Study of Williams’s symbolic portrayal of the Kingdom of God in All Hallows’ Eve. Discusses coinhere...
Outlines the geography of the Empire in Williams’s Arthuriad, and the symbolic meaning of its parts
Believes that Williams frequently used symbols related to the liturgical year of the Anglican Church...
Argues that Williams, in recasting the Grail legend into his own Christian metaphysics, used the thr...
In this analysis of a poem from Charles Williams’s Taliessin cycle, Taliessin in the Rose-Garden, I ...
Notes similarities between the angelicals that appear in The Place of the Lion and the Gnostic archo...
Discusses the medieval theological concepts of affirmation of images (romantic, seeking truth reflec...
I was introduced to the many stories of Arthur when I was a small child. I used to imagine myself as...
Religious and philosophical discussion on the nature of angels, particularly as portrayed by Lewis, ...
Charles Williams (1886-1945) devoted his life to “the Matter of Britain,” seen in a private scrapboo...
Provides a grounding in Charles Williams’s “romantic theology,” which was heavily indebted to his re...
Deals with Lewis’s use of medieval legends and religious symbolism of the unicorn in two versions of...
Detailed analysis of the symbolism and character of Williams’s Arthurian poems, which are “about the...