Saturday, November 12, 2016

The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe

aft(prenominal) reading C.S Lewiss The Lion, The Witch, and the jam I was amazed with his em propertyment on the nature of the manhood and his transition of it into text for childrens minds to become aware of things deal religion and their internal shift will, eager to explore the world. C.S Lewis unveils what the brawny human imagination is commensurate of, laying down non just a undimmed setting for his fantasy raw, but an entire world not known by each other human school principal but his own.\nTaking place around the measure of the consequence World War, CS Lewis casts a spotlight on 4 children from London who were evacuated from their homes following Hitlers bombing of England. Throughout the novel I couldnt give notice but thinking most the millions of lifeless bodies with bullet holes that contact Peter, Susan, Edmund, and Lucy. They were living in a society that was fighting and kill for their own internal bighearted will to dream and imagine. (Not to de nse like John Lennon) I get the examine of a war-torn Europe. Like an image from the book Slaughterhouse-Five, where you have the friend Billy Pilgrim go into detail about the cold, harsh tolerate conditions to the arms and legs of the deceased drop off trucks.\nAt the time this book was published, our world was approach with the threat of communism. To this day we (the occidental world) are still at battle with communist nations. We go to war over the judgment and as a end we murder and destroy. Communism eliminates wholly ideas of freedom, religion, and imagination, along with everything else CS Lewis exemplifies in his novel. We kill over the ginmill of spreading government beliefs in areas that arent even remotely close to our motherland in the western world. The White Witch, who displays a lot of the same Characteristics as Adolf Hitler, paints an image for Children to help fully understand the corruption and reprobate actions caused by this German disgusted man. It feels like CS Lewis wrote the Lion, The Wit...

No comments:

Post a Comment