C.S. Lewis adamantly defended his works against readers' and critics' propensity to find allegories within the subtext. Still, having read other Lewis stories, I can't help but see the influence of Christianity and ideas of faith seep through the re-telling of a classic myth. Still, more than anything, Lewis wants readers to come to books without presuppositions about meanings. ...
more C.S. Lewis adamantly defended his works against readers' and critics' propensity to find allegories within the subtext. Still, having read other Lewis stories, I can't help but see the influence of Christianity and ideas of faith seep through the re-telling of a classic myth. Still, more than anything, Lewis wants readers to come to books without presuppositions about meanings. This was hard for me as I continually tried to make parallels between the characters and figures/ideas from Christianity. This tactic fails, but when I finally relinquished my attempts, I found that the story was filled with truths, magnificently depicted by many figures like Psyche, Bardia, the Fox, Orual, Ungit, etc. One idea that I'd like to explore more is the idea of Bardia and Fox being representative of the Jew and the Greek that Paul talks about in some of his epistles. I also liked the "temptation" imagery that we see Psyche go through at the end. If anything, she is the Christ-figure, but I wouldn't claim a perfect analogy there. Beautifully written and intriguing. I'd recommend it to anyone.
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