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Main page » Non-Fiction » Science literature » Literature Studies » Imagination and the Arts in C. S. Lewis - Journeying to Narnia and Other Worlds


Imagination and the Arts in C. S. Lewis - Journeying to Narnia and Other Worlds

 

Peter Schakel begins by concentrating on the way reading or engaging with the other arts is an imaginative activity. He focuses on three books in which imagination is the central theme—Surprised by Joy, An Experiment in Criticism, and The Discarded Image—and shows the important role of imagination in Lewis’s theory of education.
He then examines imagination and reading in Lewis’s fiction, concentrating specifically on the Chronicles of Narnia, the most imaginative of his works. He looks at how the imaginative experience of reading the Chronicles is affected by the physical texture of the books, the illustrations, revisions of the texts, the order in which the books are read, and their narrative “voice,” the “storyteller” who becomes almost a character in the stories.



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Tags: Imagination, relate, those, including, other, Worlds, Narnia, Other, Lewis