Reflecting the eternal : Dante's Divine Comedy in the novels of C. S. Lewis / Marsha Daigle-Williamson.
Material type:
TextPublisher: Peabody, Massachusetts : Hendrickson Publishers, 2015Description: 330 pages ; 22 cmContent type: - text
- unmediated
- volume
- 9781619706651
- 1619706652
- PR 6023 .E926 Z6417 2015
| Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Barcode | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Book
|
Storms Research Center Main Collection | PR 6023 .E926 Z6417 2015 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 98650703 |
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| PR 6023 .E926 Z64 1987 C.S. Lewis / | PR 6023 .E926 Z6413 1998 Branches to heaven : the geniuses of C.S. Lewis / | PR 6023 .E926 Z6414 1996 The man who created Narnia : the story of C.S. Lewis / | PR 6023 .E926 Z6417 2015 Reflecting the eternal : Dante's Divine Comedy in the novels of C. S. Lewis / | PR 6023 .E926 Z642 1992 Planets in peril : a critical study of C.S. Lewis's Ransom trilogy / | PR 6023 .E926 Z6429 2000 The C.S. Lewis encyclopedia : a complete guide to his life, thought, and writings / | PR 6023 .E926 Z643 1990 The C.S. Lewis handbook / |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Lewis, Dante, and literary predecessors -- The pilgrim's regress -- Out of the silent planet -- The screwtape letters -- Perelandra -- That hideous strength -- The great divorce -- The Chronicles of Narnia -- Till we have faces -- Conclusion: In the footsteps of Dante.
The characters, plots, and potent language of C. S. Lewis's novels reveal everywhere the modern writer's admiration for Dante's Divine Comedy. Throughout his career Lewis drew on the structure, themes, and narrative details of Dante's medieval epic to present his characters as spiritual pilgrims growing toward God. Dante's portrayal of sin and sanctification, of human frailty and divine revelation, are evident in all of Lewis's best work. Readers will see how a modern author can make astonishingly creative use of a predecessor's material-in this case, the way Lewis imitated and adapted medieval ideas about spiritual life for the benefit of his modern audience. Nine chapters cover all of Lewis's novels, from Pilgrim's Regress and his science-fiction to The Chronicles of Narnia and Till We Have Faces. Readers will gain new insight into the sources of Lewis's literary imagination that represented theological and spiritual principles in his clever, compelling, humorous, and thoroughly human stories. -- Amazon
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