When I was a little girl, all of my friends would say that they would like to be one of the Disney princesses, and to fit in I would say that I wanted to be one too. It wasn’t until one of my elementary school teachers read the book The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe to the class. Those moments in the classroom made me instantly fall in love with the book and sparked my inspiration for one of the main characters, Aslan the lion. Throughout the story he is known as the one who rules Narnia. He is such an immensely powerful and influential creature that his presence affects everyone around him. He’s an extremely selfless character and is a fearless leader. Those reasons make me aspire to be like him. Aslan is a strong lion with a mighty roar
The Lion, The Witch, and The Wardrobe is set in England during the 1940’s. During this time World War II was happening, and the air raids in London. During this time England was already in war and was suffering due to all the lives lost so far in the the war. Germany in 1940 and 1941 would blitz England without warning, Blitz is a German word meaning ‘lightning war.’ Not only were air raids happening but we're dealing with problems within their country. They were dealing with rationing, and still trying to get back on their feet from the Great Depression.
C.S. Lewis's story, the Lion the Witch and the Wardrobe has many movies and a book about it. Not all of them are exactly alike the other but they have many similarities. The book and the newest movie is probably the closest to each other
Aslan represents Christ. The children learn that Aslan is the king of Narnia, a magical place, visited through the wardrobe. All the children except Edmund immediately love Aslan and are awed by him. The differing reactions illustrate the idea of faith. Aslan’s purpose in life is to serve others and to obey the will
The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe is a fiction in which one of the main characters, the sturdy lion Aslan, has the most power and authority. There are tons of images of Aslan from the book and the movie that relate to Jesus in Bible. The most outstanding images are the death of Aslan on top of the stone table which represents the crucifixion of Jesus, Aslan’s rebirth which is similar to the Resurrection of Jesus, and Aslan’s offering the stone statues life just as the figure of God made everything. Shortly, The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe includes a number of biblical images that are the details from the Bible which were reflected by the book and the movie.
Clive Staples Lewis experienced adversity which forever changed his life. After the passing of his mother in 1908, Lewis gave up his childhood beliefs and decided there was no God. For the next twenty-three years he lived his life as a profound atheist. In 1931, J.R.R. Tolkien and Hugo Dyson led Lewis back to Christianity. Lewis then began writing Christian and children’s literature.
Manipulative. Fearsome. Spiteful. These are three characteristics one associates with the White Witch, who is a character from C.S. Lewis’ The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe. She is said to be part giantess while also being a descendant from Adam’s first wife Lilith. She is an evil witch who has named herself the Queen of Narnia although she is not the true queen at all as she is not even from Narnia but another land. Because of this she is shown to have magic that other inhabitants do not have which she used to help name herself queen. Regrettably, while she is ruling as this false queen she is shown to exhibit lass than desirable character traits you would want out of a
C.S. Lewis wrote The Lion, The Witch, and The Wardrobe because he wanted to write a children’s book “as a gift for his godchild” (Palmer). It began for him with a series of pictures that came into his mind. “Lewis stated, ‘Everything began with images; a faun carrying an umbrella, a queen on a sledge, a magnificent lion” (Kennedy). A fairy tale was forming in his mind and “‘At first there wasn't anything Christian about them; that element pushed itself in of its own accord’” (Kennedy), As the story progresses and Lewis’s characters and storyline begin to develop a seemingly clear relationship formed between The Bible and this novel. “Given Lewis’s strong Christian faith, that is not surprising. In fact, once the story was established, Lewis said he ‘...saw how stories of this kind could steal past a certain inhibition which had paralysed much of my own religion in childhood’” (Kennedy.) Even though C.S. Lewis started off writing a children's novel, many people perceive it to be a novel written in parallel to the Bible. Lewis has used Biblical references and a classic storyline to prove that good will alway triumph over evil. Aslan is labeled as a divine figure in the novel; he is also known as the son of the Emperor-Beyond-the-Sea. Aslan’s death and resurrection is like that of Christ. The four children are all considered important to in the world of Narnia, but in the real world they are
Aslan, the lion king epitomizes the greatness of Narnia and the creatures that it inhabits. Aslan displays Christ-like traits by having power that is unmatched and being unquestionably benevolent. He shows forgiveness after rescuing Edmund from the White Witch. Aslan tells his brother and sisters, "Here is your brother and-there is no need to talk to him about what is past" (p.153).
It is through living a life filled with change and experience that Clive Staples Lewis was able to confidently proclaim, “Is any pleasure on earth as great as a circle of Christian friends by a fire” (The Quotable 223)? Without the events that led C. S. Lewis to this mindset, his famed novels would probably be nonexistent. The various aspects of Lewis’s life inspiring his works are especially prominent in The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe, an installment in his series The Chronicles of Narnia. These moments allowed Lewis to learn, mature, and grow as a person.
A children’s novel of Christianity Could Narnia be a parallel version of heaven? Some say The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe, a children’s novel written by Clive Staples Lewis, has symbolic similarities to events in the Bible. The book contains mythological creatures and a world of fantasy in the land of Narnia. This land is filled with battles of good vs evil.
A Closer Look at the Parallels between the Christian Bible and the book The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe
The Lion, The Witch, and The Wardrobe is a children’s novel by C.S. Lewis. It is an adventure and fantasy based novel about four kids (Peter, Susan, Edmund, and Lucy) who go and live with Professor Kirke during World War II, finding this magical place called Narnia in a wardrobe located in an empty room. They go on adventures, save Narnia and become the rulers. This novel is very famous and loved by most children because of its action, and magical touch to it.
“One day, you will be old enough to start reading fairy tales again” said by C.S. Lewis. People of all ages enjoy reading magical tales with mythical creatures. The Lion, The Witch, and The Wardrobe, written by C.S. Lewis, is a fictional novel that allows all audiences to explore their imagination. To take a further look into this novel, the world of magic is unearthed and adventures of the mind are explored. Within this book, religious meaning is uncovered in a innovative, relatable way that all readers can appreciate. Below illustrates personal connections to the character’s struggles, character’s feelings, and to my personal faith.
The Lion witch and the wardrobe is about four children Peter, Susan, Edmund, and Lucy with the help of Aslan, the Great Lion, who help defeat the White Witch who holds Narnia. The first of the children to make their way into Narnia is Lucy, the youngest. There she meets Mr. Tumnus the faun who confesses to her that he is an agent of the White Witch and he is supposed to capture any humans he meets. He explains that the Witch has held Narnia under an enchantment which makes it always winter and never Christmas. The only way the Witch can be defeated is to have four humans sit on the throne at the castle of Cair Paravel. When Lucy returns home, her brothers and sister think she is either lying or crazy, but soon Edmund follows Lucy into the
The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe is the first of several novels in the C.S. Lewis’s Chronicles of Narnia. These books tell stories of another universe that is called Narnia. Here there are many unearthly things from talking animals and evil witches. The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe is the story of four young siblings who discover this new world by entering a wardrobe. Little did they know, they were destined to become the new royalty of Narnia but only after going through many battles. In The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe, C.S. Lewis analyzes the character Lucy, the theme of good versus evil, and the parallels of Narnia to other literature and Lewis’s life.