This paper studies the various definitions of magic and the magical which are lined with the realities of the world. It explores the role played by C.S. Lewis in adding a different perspective to the definitions that were given by various writers such as J.R.R Tolkien and or Gabriel Marquez. This paper gives a detailed description of how myth and folklore are converted and suffused with magical realism. It details the transfer of myth from one generation to another and from one world to another. The underlying question in the analysis and its main concern is to show the consequences of the existence of rites and magic in a magical world like Narnia in relation to the ‘real’ earth. Such a task requires re-defining the concepts of the natural...
The thesis entitled C. S. Lewis: The Chronicles of Narnia and imagination primarily focuses on the ...
Animals are an important and omnipresent element in both fantastic and medieval literature. The thes...
A reading of the Narnian chronicles as fantasy, not Christian allegory, and notes “the tension betwe...
This paper discusses C.S Lewis’s novel The Magician’s Nephew as a narrative of its hero’s struggle t...
The enormous popularity of the book series The Chronicles of Narnia by British author C. S. Lewis in...
I think almost everyone has heard of Narnia, the magical world accessible through a wardrobe. As a c...
In my thesis I would like to examine the Narnia tales more closely, regarding the mythical structur...
Examines the imagined medievalism of Lewis’s That Hideous Strength and the Narnia books, and shows h...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 144-150)Most of us are familiar with the central theme of...
C.S. Lewis's "The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe" is a masterpiece that incorporates biblical the...
Studies of C.S. Lewis’ thought have been permanently changed by Michael Ward’s Planet Narnia, which ...
Lewis and Tolkien were apologists for magic in an age where the lore of wood and stone had all but b...
The aim of this article is to present a variety of inspirations and reception of ancient myths that ...
A widely-discussed experience of encountering C. S. Lewis’ Chronicles of Narnia is one of betrayal: ...
The discovery of a magical world can be exciting, as it was for the siblings who discovered Narnia, ...
The thesis entitled C. S. Lewis: The Chronicles of Narnia and imagination primarily focuses on the ...
Animals are an important and omnipresent element in both fantastic and medieval literature. The thes...
A reading of the Narnian chronicles as fantasy, not Christian allegory, and notes “the tension betwe...
This paper discusses C.S Lewis’s novel The Magician’s Nephew as a narrative of its hero’s struggle t...
The enormous popularity of the book series The Chronicles of Narnia by British author C. S. Lewis in...
I think almost everyone has heard of Narnia, the magical world accessible through a wardrobe. As a c...
In my thesis I would like to examine the Narnia tales more closely, regarding the mythical structur...
Examines the imagined medievalism of Lewis’s That Hideous Strength and the Narnia books, and shows h...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 144-150)Most of us are familiar with the central theme of...
C.S. Lewis's "The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe" is a masterpiece that incorporates biblical the...
Studies of C.S. Lewis’ thought have been permanently changed by Michael Ward’s Planet Narnia, which ...
Lewis and Tolkien were apologists for magic in an age where the lore of wood and stone had all but b...
The aim of this article is to present a variety of inspirations and reception of ancient myths that ...
A widely-discussed experience of encountering C. S. Lewis’ Chronicles of Narnia is one of betrayal: ...
The discovery of a magical world can be exciting, as it was for the siblings who discovered Narnia, ...
The thesis entitled C. S. Lewis: The Chronicles of Narnia and imagination primarily focuses on the ...
Animals are an important and omnipresent element in both fantastic and medieval literature. The thes...
A reading of the Narnian chronicles as fantasy, not Christian allegory, and notes “the tension betwe...