
The Faun's Bookshelf
Description
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While visiting with Mr. Tumnus in The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, Lucy Pevensie notices a bookshelf filled with such titles as Nymphs and Their Ways and Is Man a Myth? Be- ginning with these imaginary texts, Charlie W. Starr offers a comprehensive study of C. S. Lewis's theory of myth, including his views on Greek and Norse mythology, the origins of myth, and the implications of myth on thought, art, gender, theology, and literary and linguistic theory. For Lewis, myth represents an ancient mode of thought focused in the imagination-a mode that became the key that ultimately brought Lewis to his belief in Jesus Christ as the myth become fact.
Beginning with a fThe Faun's Bookshelf goes on to discuss the many books Lewis imagined throughout his writings-books whose titles he made up but never wrote. It also presents the sylvan myths central to the first two book titles in Mr. Tumnus's library, including explorations of the relation- ship between myth and reality, the spiritual significance of natural conservation, and the spiritual and incarnational qualities of gender.
Starr then turns to the definition of myth, the literary qualities of myth, the mythic nature inherent in divine glory, humanity's destiny to embrace (or reject) that glory, and a deeper exploration of the epistemological ramifications of myth in relation to meaning, imagination, reason, and truth.
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Content
- Cover
- Copyright
- Contents
- Foreword
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Part I: Folios and Fauns
- Chapter One: Of the Making of Many (Fake) Books: Lewis and Mythopoeia
- Chapter Two: Fauns and Their Fantasies
- Chapter Three: Might Myth Be Real?
- Part II: Narnian Reality, Terran Myth
- Chapter Four: The Life and Letters of Silenus
- Chapter Five: Fauns Are from Mars, Nymphs Are from Venus
- Chapter Six: Why Sylvan Myths Matter
- Part III: Terran Reality as Myth in Narnia
- Chapter Seven: Defining Myth
- Chapter Eight: Men, Monks, and Gamekeepers
- a Study in Popular Legend
- Chapter Nine: Is Man a Myth?
- Part IV: Beyond the Bookshelf
- Chapter Ten: Mythic Knowing
- Chapter Eleven: Lewis and the North
- Chapter Twelve: An Interpretive Mystery of Mythic Proportion
- Permissions Acknowledgments
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
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