C. S. Lewis: Oxford's Literary chameleon of letters
págs. 23-43
Of more than academic interest: C.S. Lewis and the Golden Age
Andrew Blake
págs. 47-60
págs. 61-73
A little light on the shadowlands: C.S. Lewis and suffering
págs. 75-86
The second love: Friendship, Jack and The Inklings
págs. 89-97
J.R.R. Tolkien y C.S. Lewis: su repercusión en España
págs. 99-109
Sobre los cuentos de hadas: en torno a J.R.R. Tolkien y sus criaturas mitológicas
págs. 111-120
The Rhetorical Machine: C.S. Lewis on Allegory
págs. 123-134
Edmund Spenser's "Bower of Bliss": feminist deconstructions and constructions from C.S. Lewis to Pam Morris
págs. 135-149
The rhetoric of love and the rhetoric of truth in C.S. Lewis: allegory and the Bible
págs. 151-158
The Drab Age: C.S. Lewis's assessment of English poetryin the early Sixteenth Century
págs. 159-176
págs. 177-187
págs. 191-201
págs. 203-224
In search of a mother figure: C.S. Lewis and his Ssories for children
págs. 225-235
Deconstructing C.S. Lewis: literary echoes in "The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe"
págs. 237-250
Beyond empowerment through faith: inversions and contradictions in Namia
págs. 251-272
Writing for children: spiritual fantasy in C.S. Lewis and George MacDonald
págs. 273-284
Surprised by Wilde: on the parallels between the tales of C.S. Lewis and Osear Wilde
págs. 285-298
C.S. Lewis's theology of fantasy
Colin Duriez
págs. 301-326
"Till we have faces": viejas historias, nuevos significados
págs. 327-341
© 2001-2024 Fundación Dialnet · Todos los derechos reservados