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Narnia-related conversations in several places have sparked my curiosity: where were you when you understood that the Narnia books are about Christianity? Or did you always know?
I read The Magician's Nephew and The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe when I was quite little, maybe 5 or 6 ish? I didn't know about reading in publication rather than chronological order, and I have an unusual degree of affection for The Magician's Nephew. I found it slightly weird, but, well, I was reading a lot of books that were really meant for somewhat older kids (or even adults) and I was generally used to the idea that everything in books is weird and half-understood.
So I went looking for more books in the series, and found Prince Caspian which felt very sequel-ish, the Pevensies return to Narnia and a bunch of unmemorable stuff happens. And then I found The voyage of the Dawn Treader, which felt properly exciting again (I do slightly muddle it in memory with Arthur Ransome's We didn't mean to go to sea). And then there's that scene at the end where Aslan turns out to be a Lamb as well as a Lion, and that was the moment where my lovely portal fantasy turned out to be preaching about Jesus.
One of the discussions I read, I think on Making Light, roughly divided people into two groups, more or less that people from a Christian background realize the allegory at the end of Dawn Treader, and people from non-Christian backgrounds get all the way through to The Last Battle with their innocence intact. I don't know why as a seven-year-old Jewish kid I had any idea about Jesus as the Sacrificial Lamb, I think I was just a sponge for random facts about about the world.
The thing is that this was really bad timing for me, because I had just started at a new school and I was in a class with a teacher who bullied me really badly, for lots of reasons but a prominent one was that she was upset that I didn't share her Christian beliefs. So I was getting shouted at a lot for not believing in Jesus and particularly for not believing in Original Sin (which the teacher felt should have been a gimme as it's in the Old Testament), and to find out that Aslan, the fantasy character I loved, was Jesus after all was really upsetting.
I mean, getting bullied about religion had made me really stubborn about the fact that I don't believe in Jesus. So I think my main feeling was not the more typically reported sense of betrayal that preaching was sneaked into the story, but more like feeling excluded, this story was not for me, it was for Christian children. I felt vaguely guilty for cheering for Aslan, given that I was personally fighting for my right not to consider that I was Saved by Jesus' sacrifice, whereas within the story I had accepted the idea that Aslan's sacrifice saved Edmund. It wasn't until I was older that I started worrying about whether Aslan's sacrifice was meaningful if he was really the creator of Narnia and outside the rules that normally mean dead people have to stay dead.
Later on I met OICCU types (I'm always tempted to call them oiks) who quoted Lewis at me, and I thought, you're not tapping into childhood nostalgia, you're evoking childhood misery because it's only been a decade since last time someone tried to bully me into believing in Jesus. Besides, I may have quibbles with how CS Lewis understood religion, but college Christian Union zealots really really don't understand Lewis.
I read The Magician's Nephew and The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe when I was quite little, maybe 5 or 6 ish? I didn't know about reading in publication rather than chronological order, and I have an unusual degree of affection for The Magician's Nephew. I found it slightly weird, but, well, I was reading a lot of books that were really meant for somewhat older kids (or even adults) and I was generally used to the idea that everything in books is weird and half-understood.
So I went looking for more books in the series, and found Prince Caspian which felt very sequel-ish, the Pevensies return to Narnia and a bunch of unmemorable stuff happens. And then I found The voyage of the Dawn Treader, which felt properly exciting again (I do slightly muddle it in memory with Arthur Ransome's We didn't mean to go to sea). And then there's that scene at the end where Aslan turns out to be a Lamb as well as a Lion, and that was the moment where my lovely portal fantasy turned out to be preaching about Jesus.
One of the discussions I read, I think on Making Light, roughly divided people into two groups, more or less that people from a Christian background realize the allegory at the end of Dawn Treader, and people from non-Christian backgrounds get all the way through to The Last Battle with their innocence intact. I don't know why as a seven-year-old Jewish kid I had any idea about Jesus as the Sacrificial Lamb, I think I was just a sponge for random facts about about the world.
The thing is that this was really bad timing for me, because I had just started at a new school and I was in a class with a teacher who bullied me really badly, for lots of reasons but a prominent one was that she was upset that I didn't share her Christian beliefs. So I was getting shouted at a lot for not believing in Jesus and particularly for not believing in Original Sin (which the teacher felt should have been a gimme as it's in the Old Testament), and to find out that Aslan, the fantasy character I loved, was Jesus after all was really upsetting.
I mean, getting bullied about religion had made me really stubborn about the fact that I don't believe in Jesus. So I think my main feeling was not the more typically reported sense of betrayal that preaching was sneaked into the story, but more like feeling excluded, this story was not for me, it was for Christian children. I felt vaguely guilty for cheering for Aslan, given that I was personally fighting for my right not to consider that I was Saved by Jesus' sacrifice, whereas within the story I had accepted the idea that Aslan's sacrifice saved Edmund. It wasn't until I was older that I started worrying about whether Aslan's sacrifice was meaningful if he was really the creator of Narnia and outside the rules that normally mean dead people have to stay dead.
Later on I met OICCU types (I'm always tempted to call them oiks) who quoted Lewis at me, and I thought, you're not tapping into childhood nostalgia, you're evoking childhood misery because it's only been a decade since last time someone tried to bully me into believing in Jesus. Besides, I may have quibbles with how CS Lewis understood religion, but college Christian Union zealots really really don't understand Lewis.
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Date: 2015-06-25 09:16 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2015-06-25 11:24 am (UTC)And yes, I do think Lewis can be very smug and paternalistic, though I do like some of The Screwtape letters. But I definitely do have bad associations with Lewis' version of Christianity because of the stupid preachy Christian Union types.
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Date: 2015-06-25 09:42 am (UTC)I went back and re-read it all a few years ago, around the time the LWW film came out. (Not consciously because of the film, though it's perfectly possible that the upcoming film caused lots of people to happen to mention Narnia in conversation, which in turn planted the idea of rereading it in my head.) When I did that, I was struck by the fact that with one notable exception, the Christian propaganda is quite separate from the exciting fantasy storytelling, and the latter had stuck in my memory much better than the former: for example, my memories of The Magician's Nephew were quite detailed in the sections with the Wood Between The Worlds, the yellow and green rings, Charn, the creation of Narnia, and Jadis's visit to London, and almost completely blank about the huge deal made of the magic apple tree and the attempted temptation. It's as if my 8-year-old brain had recognised that bit (and several others) as tedious advert breaks and quietly filtered them out, even without really understanding what was being advertised.
The one notable exception to that clear separation into proper story and advert breaks, of course, is Aslan's self-sacrifice and resurrection in LWW, just because it's so totally central to the plot that you can't possibly forget it if you remember anything about how the story goes. And of course that's the one Lewis wrote first, so I can't help wondering if that was his one actually good idea in this area and the rest was bodged together half-heartedly...
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Date: 2015-06-25 09:57 am (UTC)This is my enduring thought about the series. There isn't anything like enough fuel in that one analogy to power an entire seven-book sequence. And it's especially problematic that the book with the good idea ends up as number 2. TMN is a pretty good prequel, and TH&HB a good interquel*, but every subsequent return to the well diminishes the impact of TLTW&TW culminating in an event which Lewis fairly explicitly portrays as the Narnian part of the trans-universal meta-historical event of the Passion.
*Team Aravis, always.
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Date: 2015-06-25 09:52 am (UTC)I loved TMN, and gained renewed respect for it when I read Dante's Divine Comedy, as I felt that the garden where the healing apple is found was probably inspired by the Earthly Paradise - a good mirror of the fallen Eden. Lewis, with his love of classical pagan syncretism, was probably thinking at least as much of the Garden of the Hesperides, but still.
I really don't like TLB, and not just for Susan-related reasons. The business about Tash, while not an actual Voodoo Shark non-fix, is still a pretty crappy (and creepy) approach to unfamiliar religion. But more generally, the apocalyptic feel which begins to creep in after leaving the final island in VotDT, and which pervades TSC, is stifling in TLB. I like apocalyptic literature, but it doesn't make for good YA novels, especially in such an uncritical treatment.
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Date: 2015-06-25 11:52 am (UTC)The Atonement stuff kind of offended my sense of justice when I was a kid, and I can't say I'm entirely over the feeling that it seems deeply unfair for God to punish all of humanity just because their progenitor committed a sin, and equally it seems deeply unfair for God to punish sinless Jesus for the actual sins of anybody else. It's really interesting to me that that's something you struggle with.
I think Dante, too, would have been influenced by Classical Pagan thought, so it's not surprising you see similar elements in Dante and Lewis. And I do think you're right that apocalypse literature doesn't fit very well into the children's fantasy frame, there just isn't a way to do it that would make it work within the established genre.
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Date: 2015-06-25 10:00 am (UTC)I converted to Judaism as an adult, so I was not a Jewish child, but my parents were not particularly religious, and I mostly went to school in a part of Canada where the publicly funded schools were either secular or Catholic, and I always went to the secular schools, so I never really learnt much about Christian teachings anyway. We had no RE at school there at all.
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Date: 2015-06-25 11:54 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2015-06-25 10:01 am (UTC)I think, I read all the books except the last battle and I had no clue. I think the bit with the lamb, I remember thinking "wait, is that Jesus?" or something like that, but I don't think I really connected it to the rest of the books.
I've no idea how I failed making the connection, I think I went to a CoE-y school, but got a vague idea of religion involving platitudes and God being up in the sky, but didn't actually grok any of the theology.
And then years later, I read Last Battle and I think by then I had some idea, but just found it really really sad. I liked some of the early bits, but the well-meaning donkey was tricked into being evil and the selfish ape turned from rogueish and misguided to really evil, and all the Narnians fell to the inevitabilitiy, and the good guys made an effort and then everything they tried failed, and they tried harder -- and still failed. And then it was scary and everyone died.
And it felt really arbitrary, like the world went evil because everyone was worshipping false-Aslan. But Aslan could have cleared everything up by just asking them not to. And I didn't quite have the sense of this at the time, but everyone KNEW false Aslan was asking them to do bad things, but they did them anyway -- because the message "do whatever Aslan said" had been drummed into them. If Aslan had told them to think for themselves all along, they wouldn't have been in that fix! And then rather than fixing it, Aslan writes off the world and ends it. And then everyone randomly dies, and then something something heaven.
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Date: 2015-06-25 10:05 am (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2015-06-25 11:16 am (UTC)But despite a Church of England childhood, I didn't pick up on it from reading the books. I had to *see* it to notice it.
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Date: 2015-06-25 12:02 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2015-06-25 11:19 am (UTC)I'm going to be the odd one out in never having read them. They weren't something that ever came up even though I was a voracious reader as a child. I was vaguely aware they were out there, but don't recall ever picking up a copy, nor having them mentioned at (Catholic) school.
So the first time I knew they were a Christian allegory was when I read the entry on them in the Encyclopaedia of Fantasy, and that completely put me off ever reading them. I have this vague memory of sitting there going 'He did what?!? In a kids book!?!' I'm uncomfortable with Christian evangelization at the best of times (no matter I'm Catholic) and this struck me as being almost abusive in nature.
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Date: 2015-06-25 12:07 pm (UTC)I'm impressed that you're the only English-speaking bookish child not to have read the Narnia books. I think if you're over about eight you're probably too old to get much out of them, beyond that they're part of the cultural fabric. And yeah, I don't like evangelizing to kids either, but I think that's not what Lewis was aiming for, I think he was writing for kids who were already Christians to help them to understand their faith better, which is still dubious but less outright abusive.
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Date: 2015-06-25 11:23 am (UTC)Also: in my experience OICCU was populated almost entirely by jerks, most of whom wanted to convert me because everyone knows that Catholics aren't actually Christian... they refused to let our assistant chaplain join on that basis, I believe.
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Date: 2015-06-25 12:15 pm (UTC)I definitely agree that OICCU was full of jerks. I knew a lot of Protestants who ended up joining CathSoc or MethSoc cos they wanted a non-jerky Christian environment. My point is that I don't really hold Lewis responsible for what infiltrated Christian Unions do with his writing. My impression is that the American Christianist cults who run groups like OICCU thought that lots of quoting Lewis would be a good strategy because people would remember the Narnia books fondly from childhood, but that had the opposite effect on me because I kind of associate Narnia with being bullied by a wrong-headed Christian.
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Date: 2015-06-25 12:06 pm (UTC)I *cannot* handle the Screwtape Letters, although I cognitively recognise they are very funny and influenced things I do like (eg: Good Omens). But I know too many people who read it as an actual guide to demonic goings-on. I've had the Screwtape Letters quoted at me as evangelical material to remedy my stubborn refusal to believe that demons cause, eg, the common headcold.
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Date: 2015-06-25 12:24 pm (UTC)I must admit it never occurred to me to take the demons in The Screwtape letters literally! I assumed it was all metaphors for the nature of temptation and how to resist it. But ugh, yes, if people were trying to use Lewis to make you believe in demons, that would be very offputting indeed.
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Date: 2015-06-25 12:47 pm (UTC)I told my mother I was reading LWW for the first time and she seemed surprised that she hadn't given them to me as a child, since she had read them as a child, and since as a children's librarian, she was usually my pusher. But I don't think it's really all that surprising... I don't think I would have loved the books as a child, either.
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Date: 2015-06-25 01:00 pm (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2015-06-25 12:56 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2015-06-25 01:07 pm (UTC)Also, what an amazingly appropriate icon!
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Date: 2015-06-25 01:22 pm (UTC)I think my favourites now are TMN and TH&HB, and also TVotDT, just for the dreamlike weirdness of the latter half of the book. I personally don't mind the allegory, but I'm not sure I'd recommend it to anyone without a warning of what it was about. I find it really quite unsubtle. I think your comments that it was intended for children brought up in a Christian environment are spot-on, actually, and quite helpful for my understanding of what Lewis was trying to do.
As for TLB, the pictures of Tash in my edition gave me nightmares - my mum taped white paper over them so I could read it. It never got quite as much reading as the others did!
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Date: 2015-06-25 01:37 pm (UTC)And yes, it does seem much kinder to offer the books to children with the explanation that they're versions of the Christian story, so that the readers don't feel betrayed when they work it out. is very much one of Lewis' strengths, which is in many ways why he is more successful as a fantasy writer than a theologian.
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Date: 2015-06-25 01:29 pm (UTC)...also I immediately recognized Aslan's sacrifice in LWW as a Christ metaphor even if I didn't recognize the story as a Christian allegory overall, but I recognized it as a poorly done Christ metaphor? My church was really big on teaching kids actual bible text and pretty sophisticated theology early on, plus I'd already read fantasy novels that had much better-done Christ metaphors (it's not like they're hard to find in fantasy) so when Aslan just came back I was mostly like "well, that was pointless". I did end up reading a couple of the others because they were around the house and they had dragons and friends were really into them but I still haven't read most of them and I never got as far as TLB.
It sucks that you had to go through that. :/ fwiw anyone who puts a ton of stock in Lewis' theology immediately loses my respect too - Screwtape was fun 'cause it was meant to be shallow, although not nearly as good as Twain's Letters from the Earth that I read at the same time, and all the rest of his writing I've read just annoys me at how self-congratulatorily shallow and culturally smug it is.
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Date: 2015-06-25 01:44 pm (UTC)It's interesting that you lose respect for people who take Lewis' theology too seriously. I'm not putting a high priority on reading his writings, though I accept he gets quoted out of context a lot. I feel like a lot of what he's doing is writing apologetics, he's not really trying to convince other people to become Christian, more to convince himself that what he emotionally wants to believe is justified. And that sort of writing often is shallow and self-congratulatory.
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Date: 2015-06-25 02:19 pm (UTC)I don't come from a Christian household but my first primary school teacher was quite dedicated to Christianity and perhaps that had an influence on her choice to have us read the books at school. However, the allegory went completely over my head at the time.
Aged about 18 or 19, I was living in the USA doing odd jobs in university summer vacations. I had picked up some work on a farm and was harvesting salad greens with the other workers, one of whom was a very tall and rather innocent lad, with that well-scrubbed, impeccable-manners, denim-overall-and-straw-hat lay missionary kind of vibe. I don't remember how we started talking about C.S Lewis but he recommended 'Mere Christianity' as a book to read to understand his religious outlook. I must have said something like, 'What, the Narnia guy' and then he explained about the allegory. I remember it vividly, standing in the middle of the rows of lettuce thinking, 'OHHH!'.
I remember that the other person working with us was someone whose family I lived with at the time - I was their live-in babysitter - and he was orphaned quite young in Colombia and quite possibly brought up under the 'guidance' of monks or nuns, and when we got onto the subject of Christianity he quickly became quite angry and rude, which I found surprising, as he was generally mellow to a fault. I felt a bit sorry for the lay missionary guy. Myself, I felt a bit betrayed that these books which I had really enjoyed actually had some other message in them and I had a little bit of the disappointment you describe - I was also bullied later, in another school, partly for not being a churchgoing Christian. Or at least if not outright bullied, certainly it was regarded as weird and suspicious. So there was also a sense of the thing being taken away, sort of, that they had been intended for 'good' children and not for people like me.
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Date: 2015-06-27 09:45 am (UTC)I do feel bad for you over the religiously intolerant bullying, that's a shared experience I would never wish for :-( And the poor Colombian guy! I am extremely conscious that for all the positive influence of religion in my life, religious people and religious institutions have perpetrated some really appalling abuse against many of the people I know, and I do often wonder whether it's right for me to continue to be part of those structures and systems.
And thank you for your as ever vivid story of when you found out. When there's a long time between reading the books as great stories and realizing that they weren't meant for you, I can see that feels like something taken away.
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Date: 2015-06-25 05:50 pm (UTC)I was raised in a mixture of Quakerism and Church of England, and I read all of the Narnia books repeatedly except the Last Battle (because it's horrible and has a horrible ending), and I utterly failed to notice any of the allegory until some time in my late teens. I don't even remember exactly when I realised it, but I'm pretty certain it was from a comment by a friend and me going "... you're right, it totally is, isn't it?"
We have a set of the books on the children's shelves, but I haven't reread them recently.
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Date: 2015-06-27 09:55 am (UTC)Interesting that you also missed the allegory until you were a bit older and your friend pointed it out to you. Not rereading The Last Battle was a very good choice! And perhaps you should tell your kids there are only six books in the series... (Not in a lying way, but in a fannish tradition of pretending the bad sequels never happened.)
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Date: 2015-06-26 04:44 am (UTC)It was more exciting when i discovered that the astronomy book i had by AA Milne was by the same person who wrote the Pooh books. Really? It's the same person? It took some convincing to make me accept that they weren't written by two different people who happened to have the same name. Of course i was much younger then than when i learnt about Lewis.
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Date: 2015-06-27 10:00 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2015-06-26 05:45 am (UTC)I read in publication order, and – I'm surprised nobody else mentions this – had a grunch of exclusion when I got to Father Christmas in LWW. I kind of sighed over it and rolled my eyes, and figured (I was about 9 at the time) that the author must simply be so religiously provincial it didn't occur to him that Christmas was a holiday specific to Christians. I mean, my literal first thought was, "Oh, come on, Narnia has Jesus in it? Do they have their own Jesus or did the one in this world suffice to die for their sins? *eyeroll*"
Also, apparently unlike everybody else, I didn't think Aslan's sacrifice in LWW was notably Christ-like, because I was already well-aware that self-sacrificing deathless kings are not a meme owned by Christianity. Also, Aslan gives up himself to save one person, not many, which did not seem at all analogous to me.
But I eventually got to the end of the VotDT, the bit with the Lion and the Lamb, and like a lot of people, had a lightbulb go on.
It's just that in my case, it was a slightly different lightbulb.
I thought: "Holy crap, Lewis thinks Aslan's supposed to be Jesus... and he's wrong."
It took me a very long time to get the language to explain the incongruity I was observing. Adulthood really. But what I was twigging to was that the archetypes don't match.
Lewis thought he was channeling the Christian savior into the character of Aslan. He was channeling a god, alright. Just not that one.
You know that bit about good Tash worshippers actually being unwitting Aslan worshippers? Just like that: people, including Lewis, who think that in adoring Aslan they're adoring Jesus, are actually adoring some other god. Some older, quite pagan, god.
So, that's when I knew that they're supposed to be about Christianity. But where was I when I understood that the Narnia books are about Christianity? Oh, I haven't ever understood any such thing.
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Date: 2015-06-26 10:47 am (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2015-06-26 07:43 am (UTC)We did have one schoolteacher who seemed to have a (comparatively minor) problem with beliefs he didn't shared. The bit that stands out is calling JWs and Mormons 'cults' in RE lessons about them, in context obviously in one of the negative sense of the word. There was some kind of argument with some overtly atheist pupils that I don't recall any details of.
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Date: 2015-06-29 03:27 pm (UTC)That RE teacher sounds annoying; I had quite a few similar experiences, where the curriculum included various "world religions" but CoE-style Christianity was assumed to be the default and basically the right answer, and everything else was taught in relationship to that.
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Date: 2015-06-26 07:43 am (UTC)Having been raised within the broader Catholic context (and spotting it relatively young) I didn't feel betrayed, though I did feel a bit dim for not having noticed the first time through.
Even as a Catholic, I bounced hard off TLB, both because of the troubling salvation stuff at the end but primarily because the first three-quarters of it are just an incoherent mess of a book.
I reread them again while at University, and really struggled with the racism and colonialism in VotDT: in particular, there's a really hideous scene where the "wise wizard" governing an island full of "primitive" people explains how difficult he finds living with such morons, but how it is worth it for him because he knows that at some time in the very far future they may become properly civilized people.
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Date: 2015-06-29 03:31 pm (UTC)I haven't in fact reread Lewis as an adult and I'm not surprised there was some racism fairy effect going on. I was reading a lot of quite old-fashioned children's books at the time and I was mostly used to the idea of "primitive" people being one of the experiences protagonists would encounter on their fantastic journeys. Doesn't make it ok, but I'm fairly sure Dawn Treader wouldn't have stood out from the background.
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Date: 2015-06-29 03:38 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2015-06-27 08:05 am (UTC)Sorry to hear about that clueless teacher - and the almost equally clueless people who wouldn't think such a thing would happen! (I don't think I'm that much older than you (if I even am) and the stuff I heard growing up would get people scrambling for the smelling salts nowadays...)
We had to do a unit on LWW in fifth grade. I have no recollection when I learned that Aslan was an allegory for Jesus, but I remember it being already in the back of my mind by the time we even got to the point of the Stone Table.
(Background: I was being brought up and raised as an Evangelical, and was already no longer believing by fifth grade - my overall first impression of the book was quite negative about its message, albeit with a few very bright spots with the vividness of Lewis' descriptions - I loved the White Witch, was amused at the lion who was going around with the "us lions" schtick, and identified very much with pre-battle Edmund for years. While I did get and enjoy a few snippets of SC in my teens and mid twenties (I am an avid non-reader and non-finisher of books -_-), it would be many years before I'd pick up OOTSP after being inspired by that Iron Maiden song, then discover the Screwtape Letters and have it be one of the many, many things (the manyness itself being among them) that ended up eventually pointing me back to Christianity, albeit in an utterly different understanding of it than the one I grew up with. So anyway, yeah the Narnia books are definitely more preaching to the choir in my mind than reaching out to the unchurched.)
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Date: 2015-07-01 11:30 am (UTC)And it's interesting that Lewis was part of what helped you to reconnect with Christianity. I think I mostly see what you mean about shadows; college Christian Unions are particularly shallow but I don't really expect anybody to be able to understand God more than the vaguest of shadows, not by thinking about or describing God anyway.
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Date: 2015-07-31 07:00 am (UTC)When I was little, I refused to read The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe because I thought it must be evil because it had a witch in it. My parents tried to convince me that it was okay, and probably explained the Christian symbolism, but I didn't believe them. It was only when I watched video with my family of a combined Prince Caspian and the Voyage of the Dawn Treader (BBC?) that I thought ~hey, this is good~, and then went and read the book.
So I think I knew about the Christian symbolism before I even started reading it, but didn't initially think the book could be actually compatible with Christianity...and that idea was not coming from elders telling me that it was incompatible with Christianity, but from my own childhood interpretation of how things fit together.
Just to throw an odd case into your mix ...