I've been hearing about this book for awhile, but didn't know if it was worth mentioning. Today, however, after coming across yet another favourable reaction I thought I should post about it. It is:
Planet Narnia: The Seven Heavens in the Imagination of C.S. Lewis, by Michael Ward. Published by Oxford University Press, in 2008.
Basically, Ward thinks that Lewis' seven Narnia books match up to the seven planets (in the medieval schema) and the symbols associated with them. He argues that Lewis did this on purpose, drawing on his deep knowledge of medieval and Renaissance literature.
At first I thought this was just another highly speculative literary-conspiracy-theory book, but, as I said, it's been getting good reviews - such as this one by Tom Shippey. It sounds like Ward's theory brings out all sorts of interesting details and associations in the Narnia books. And even if the theory is ultimately faulty, it sounds like his book is still a rewarding read.
John Wilson writes:
We can imagine the reaction of the sort of Christians who have gone into a frenzy over Harry Potter. Astrology! But what Ward has discovered is entirely consistent with Lewis' Christian humanism. The imaginative worldview embodied in the medieval lore of the planets speaks to something fundamental in our experience; it is not to be rejected but rather baptized, made harmonious with the underlying Christian vision that governs Narnia.
The Mars Hill Audio Journal has done an hour-long interview with Ward, which is available here.
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6 comments:
Thanks for the tip!
As a teacher of the renaissance, Lewis was well acquainted with the science of that time...
This might be an interesting reading of the Narnia books, but I highly doubt that Lewis intended this correspondence of books with planets.
Also, the paragraph you quote made me wary in another way, because I'm always a little bit afraid that people will make silly connections (astrology!). You know. "See, Christianity is nothing but superstition".
You mean that apart from the sledgehammer allegory of "Aslan as Christ", there is a suble one about the planets?
C. S. Lewis fans, I am sorry, but unsubtle allegories irritate me - which means I never got past the first book.
Callisto: Lewis himself said that he didn't intend Narnia as an allegory, but more as an hypothesis or thought experiment. How would the story of salvation play out in another world? And then he created a world where all of the beings from the fairy tales would be real, which is fun.
His friend Williams did it, so why does it surprise folks to think that Lewis might have?
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