The
Cambridge Companion to C.S. Lewis
Edited by Robert MacSwain and Michael Ward
Cambridge University Press, 2010, £18.99, Pbk.,
325 pp., ISBN 9780521711142,
Hbk £55.00, ISBN 9780521884136
This is a new title in the Cambridge Companion to Religion series.
The series covers either major topics or key figures in theology and
religious
studies through wide ranging, specially commissioned essays by international
scholars. Although it may sound as if the level of writing is designed
for serious academic study, it is a fascinating and wide ranging collection
of essays on one of the twentieth century’s most well known religious
writers. As such it is as much for the non-specialist reader who wants
an in depth and well rounded introductory overview of Lewis’ work
in its totality.
But C. S. Lewis is much more than ‘the most influential religious
author of the twentieth century’. He is also one of its most
controversial. As the introduction makes clear, he attracts diverse and
often extreme
reactions across a wide spectrum from his large following in American
Evangelical circles, to more dismissive theologians or literary critics.
The film versions of his Narnia series continue to attract the objections
of secularists to their perceived Christian proselytising.(1) The debate
around the evaluation of the man and the work surfaces in this volume
in the editorial decision to issue it as a Cambridge Companion
to Religion rather than a Cambridge Companion
to Literature. Of twenty one chapters,
fifteen are primarily by theologians, four by literary critics and two
by contributors who are both.
As Robert MacSwain notes in his introduction, this polarity is fuelled
by Lewis the celebrity whose persona, life, and friendships are part
of the story, and whose popularity not only undermines serious consideration
of his religious writing and but also completely obscures his enormous
scholarship from the general reader. And here for me is the richness
of this Companion in that it engages with every aspect of Lewis’ work,
giving the reader an extensive and at times contradictory overview.
Michael Ward, of Planet Narnia fame, is its second editor. It therefore
comes as no surprise that Alan Jacobs in the chapter on ‘the
Chronicles of Narnia’ introduces and affirms Ward’s
research (2) on the use of the concepts
of the planets in medieval cosmology as a shaping
force. (See a recent review in Christian Librarian (3) for
further comments)
The book is structured in three sections which reflect the three major
areas of Lewis’ persona and work: scholar, thinker, and writer.
The two brief pages of biographical information in the introduction provide
a level of context for the deeper discussion of his ideas and influence.
Given the many changes in his life from his reluctant conversion onwards
which so often radically moved his thinking, it is both inevitable and
helpful that many of the contributors locate their discussion of particular
works and ideas within the context of Lewis' experience.
Interestingly for a Companion on Religion we begin by a developed discussion
of the Lewis of the ‘day job’ as literary critic. John Fleming
sets his analysis within the context of the literature faculties of the
time, allowing him to show the revolutionary nature of Lewis’ intellectual
debate. Ann Loades in the chapter on ‘gender’ feels the need
to deflect the unspoken criticism of Lewis’ attitudes to women
by locating his views within their cultural and historical context. David
Jasper, in contrasting The Pilgrim's Regress and Surprised
by Joy as
his two conversion narratives, relates the development of the thinking
in both to Lewis’ experience and his other writing at the time.
This is a book which invites a serendipitous approach. I enjoyed dipping
into chapters which look at some of the more well known aspects of Lewis
thinking, or consider his more popular works, and the greater challenge
of the evaluation of his work as a theologian, intellectual historian
or classicist. As a whole it engages with the whole range of Lewis work,
and resists pinning him down in the service of any specific doctrinal
view. He is neither a fundamentalist nor modern biblical critic; both
an erudite literary historian and a writer of tales for children. The
third section, on Lewis as writer uniquely brings together discussion
of all his imaginative writing, including an excellent final chapter
on Lewis as a poet, one on Till We Have Faces – perhaps his most
underrated novel.
This volume has much to offer the general reader who wants to move on
from the more popular aspects of Lewis’ work. It is a counterbalance
to popular and limited constructs of Lewis the Christian apologist and
personality. It does not allow the reader to settle for a simplistic
view but challenges and provokes in a way which takes into consideration
the complexity and sheer scale of the man and the work.
1. See ‘ Philip Pullman attacks Narnia film plans’,
BBC News, 16 Oct 2005 ‘ Pullman has attacked plans to film the
Chronicles of Narnia calling C S Lewis books misogynistic and racial’.
2. Michael Ward, Planet Narnia :the Seven Heavens in the Imagination of C.S.Lewis(Oxford
and New York O.U.P, 2008)
3. See Jessica Yates’ review. Jessica Yates ‘Planet Narnia : the
Seven
Heavens in the Imagination of C.S. Lewis’, Christian Librarian Summer (2008)
36-38.
Contributed by: Margaret Keeling, MA, MCLIP, PhD, who
is a Vice-President of the Librarians' Christian Fellowship and worked
until
her retirement
as Head of Services for Libraries, Culture and Adult Community Learning
for Essex County Council.
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