Event Announcement: “C S Lewis: The Spiritual, Social, and Ethical Vision in his Life and Work” by the EICSP (Feb 12, 2025 at 2pm EST/7pm UK Time)

Dear Reader,

I am pleased to be part of a panel with the Edinburgh International Centre for Spirituality and Peace. The EICSP was founded in December 2007 to provide educational opportunities and an international forum for understanding, experiencing, and participating in the rich diversity of the world’s spiritual traditions. I will be speaking about “The Shape of C.S. Lewis’s Spiritual Imagination” with an intriguing combination of folks from England and North America, including Simon Barrow (the Chair), Ron Wheeler (JohnsonU), Jim Beitler (the Marion E. Wade Center, Wheaton), Elizabeth Drummond Young (the Centre for Open Learning, U Edinburgh), and Andrew Lazo (Northwind Seminary).

You can register for the live event here (by donation). The forum is about an hour of the panelist talks and then a dialogue with the audience. I have included the bios below, and I encourage you to check out the EICSP’s work.

I have been relatively busy of late, so I will update my own part in this forum when I firm up the details. I spoke last night for the New Glasgow, PEI, Women’s Institute on the topic of “Lucy Maud Montgomery: Pulling Back the Veil” as part of a series they are having for their 100th anniversary. I am also prepping for a “Theology on Tap” public talk (in a pub) on C.S. Lewis and Octavia Butler on indigenous spaces. I am teaching two great new local courses in Applied Communications, Leadership, and Culture at UPEI–one on Digital Humanities and one on Podcasting. I’m supervising a J.R.R. Tolkien MA thesis and second reading a BA Honours one while working on a chapter on Tolkien’s networks for an upcoming volume. As part of our local interdisciplinary courses, I am pinch-hitting on some Japanese history lectures. We are working to establish the Curiosity and Inquiry Research and Communications Lab (CIRCL) at UPEI, and I have a related chapter on Religious Studies and Inquiry-based Learning in its last stages. And … conference season ahead. And … I eagerly await the next stage of edits for my book in press with Oxford UP. Lots on the go!

Other news and details to come.

Best to you all,
Brenton

Online Zoom Forum: C S Lewis: The Spiritual, Social, and Ethical Vision in his Life and Work.

Date: Wednesday 12 February 2025.
Time: 7pm-9pm (UK time).

Description:

Format: There will be five talks, each of 12 minutes, followed by 20 minutes of discussion among the speakers and the chair, followed by Q & A.

Chair:

Simon Barrow:

Bio: Simon Barrow is a writer, commentator, educator and researcher with wide experience in politics, public issues, media, organisational change, ethics and religion/beliefs. He was director of the think-tank Ekklesia from 2005-2024. His book Britain Needs Change: The Politics of Hope and Labour’s Challenge, co-edited with Gerry Hassan, was published by Biteback in November 2024. His latest book is Beyond Our Means: Poetry, Prose and Blue Runes (Siglum, January 2025) and will be followed by Against the Religion of Power: Telling a Different Christian Story (Ekklesia Publishing, April 2025).

Speakers:

Prof Ron Wheeler:

Title: Reading The Screwtape Letters for Instruction in Practical Theology.

Description: In The Screwtape Letters, C. S. Lewis tackles some of the difficulties and distractions faced by the developing disciple of Jesus. To aid the transformation of Christ followers, Lewis addresses four questions: What is the nature of Reality? How do we develop as followers of Christ? What should we avoid as followers of Christ? What should we engage as followers of Christ?

Bio: Ronald E. Wheeler instructs students in composition and literature courses at Johnson University in Knoxville, Tennessee (fall 1977 to present). He also taught rhetorical studies for Tusculum College at the Knoxville campus (May 1995 through October 2006). He teaches an adult fellowship of readers at Woodlawn Christian Church. Ron and his wife, Martha, have two adult children, eight grandchildren, and one great-grandchild.

Prof Jim Beitler:

Title: Reading as a Spiritual Practice: Lessons from C.S. Lewis’s Library.

Description: This talk explores what C.S. Lewis’s notes in his books have to teach us about reading as a spiritual and ethical practice.

Bio: Jim Beitler is the Director of the Marion E. Wade Center and a Professor of English at Wheaton College, where he holds the Marion E. Wade Chair of Christian Thought. His scholarship focuses on the rhetoric of Christian witness and writing as a spiritual activity, looking to C.S. Lewis, Dorothy L. Sayers, Desmond Tutu, and other exemplary communicators as guides for faithful practice. Beitler is the author of three books—Charitable Writing: Cultivating Virtue Through Our Words (with Richard Hughes Gibson, 2020), Seasoned Speech: Rhetoric in the Life of the Church (2019), and Remaking Transitional Justice in the United States (2013)—and he teaches undergraduate courses on C.S. Lewis and J.R.R. Tolkien, Tolkien and Environmental Stewardship, and Christianity and Fantasy. He also serves as one of the hosts of the Wade Center Podcast.

Dr Elizabeth Drummond Young:

Title: Friendship and Faith.

Description: In this talk I look at CS Lewis’s assessment of friendship, and consider whether his views on this have any relationship with his personal faith journey from atheism to Christianity.

Bio: Elizabeth Drummond Young is a teaching fellow in philosophy at The University of Edinburgh (in the Centre for Open Learning). Her research interests include the contribution of women to philosophy in the 20th Century and the philosophy of religion. 

Dr Brenton Dickieson:

Bio: Besides teaching in the literature department at Signum University, Dr. Brenton Dickieson is Lecturer in Literature at The King’s College in New York City, Lecturer in Theology and Literature at Maritime Christian College in Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, Sessional Instructor in the Centre for the Study of Christianity and Culture at the University of Prince Edward Island, and Instructor in Spiritual Theology at Regent College in Vancouver, BC. He also does freelance speaking and writing and is the author of the popular Faith, Fiction, and Fantasy blog http://www.aPilgrimInNarnia.com.

After completing a Masters degree in biblical literature at Regent College, Brenton moved with his wife Kerry and his son Nicolas to their native home in Charlottetown, PEI to teach and write. His academic interests include how the creation of fictional universes helps in spiritual formation, theological exploration, and cultural criticism. He has recently completed a PhD at the University of Chester, focusing his work on C.S. Lewis, J.R.R. Tolkien, and the Inklings.

The Rev Andrew Lazo:

Bio: The Rev. Andrew Lazo is an internationally-known speaker and writer specializing in C.S. Lewis and the Inklings. Andrew earned his Masters in Modern British Literature from Rice University where he was a Jacob K. Javits fellow in the Humanities. He is a frequent speaker around the U.S. and U.K. and has written several articles on C.S. Lewis and J.R.R. Tolkien. In 2009, Andrew published Mere Christians: Inspiring Encounters with C.S. Lewis. In 2014 he also was honored to transcribe, edit, and publish a previously unknown book by C.S. Lewis, “Early Prose Joy,” which was Lewis’s very first spiritual autobiography. For ten years he taught English and C. S. Lewis at St. Thomas and  Houston Christian High Schools. in Houston.

After finishing studies for an M. Div. (with Honors) at Virginia Theological Seminary in Alexandria, VA in May 2022, Andrew was ordained a priest in the Episcopal Church in January 2023 and serves as the Apprentice Rector at Church of the Messiah in Winter Garden, FL. He is also pursuing his doctorate in Romantic Theology at Northwind Seminary, where he serves as a Distinguished Lecturer. Andrew is married to author and speaker Dr Christin Ditchfield Lazo.

For more than fifteen years, Andrew has been working on a long-awaited study of Till We Have Faces, making groundbreaking discoveries all along the way. The results of his ongoing research have led him to give talks to the Mythopoeic Society in 2016 as Scholar Guest of Honor; in the summer of 2017, Andrew served as a plenary speaker at the C.S. Lewis Foundation’s 2017 Summer Institute in Oxford and Cambridge.

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The Crowded Skyscape of the Modern Mind: An Oxford Tale

In Mary Poppins’ London, chimneys puncture the skyscape like fenceposts on an English hill. New York’s skyline shattered in our imagination as this 21st century began, and still, the skyscrapers crowd together as if protecting Lady Liberty from the sea. We know Chicago’s lakeside shadow too, though it is acres of suburban clusters in neat little spirals linked with old West grids that organize the eye when flying above. In Paris the Eiffel Tower is the vertical axis of both geography and culture, as are the towers of Seattle, Toronto, and Dubai. Even here in quaint Charlottetown, the spires of St. Dunstan’s arise from the city, like three hands reaching for the heavens.  

Oxford’s legendary skyline is a human way to paint the sky. In a poem to a lost friend, Matthew Arnold begins, 

“How changed is here each spot man makes or fills!” 

It is certainly true that human beings make and fill. Naturally, we shape nature, but then we fill it full to bursting with us, from “The village street its haunted mansion lacks” to “the roofs the twisted chimney-stacks.” 

In this way, Arnold walks us into Oxford: 

Runs it not here, the track by Childsworth Farm, 
Past the high wood, to where the elm-tree crowns 
The hill behind whose ridge the sunset flames? 
The signal-elm, that looks on Ilsley Downs, 
The Vale, the three lone weirs, the youthful Thames?— 
This winter-eve is warm,
Humid the air! leafless, yet soft as spring, 
The tender purple spray on copse and briers! 
And that sweet city with her dreaming spires, 
She needs not June for beauty’s heightening, . . . (“Thyrsis,” Selection, 153) 

Arnold’s patriotic plan for changing “each spot” with human making and filling has, at times, been horrifying in its presumptions and results. However, there is a reason that his phrase “dreaming spires” seems exactly right. Glimmering steeples, ancient towers, and lanterned domes stand guard over a medieval city in the air. Like stalagmites with vertigo, Oxford’s steeples and pinnacles and gargoyle-guarded cathedral girding have grown with the ages. The skyline is peopled with the ghosts of a Gothic era that Oxford never quite leaves behind. As (now) Dr. Emilie Noteboom said when I first put feet to cobblestones, in Oxford, you must look up. 

360 Virtual Tour of Oxford by Circus

I don’t know whether Oxford’s dreaming spires are swords of civilization raised in triumph or candles of the penitent trimmed by the gods, but it fills me with imaginative delight every time. I miss it now. 

Even in a city of a million peaks and a hundred churches, Oxford’s Christ Church Cathedral is not forgotten. Though the current building is much newer—built in the last part of the 1100s—it is on the traditional site of St. Frideswide priory and a Saxon cemetery. It is a mixture of Norman and Gothic architecture; its cruciform (cross-shaped) stone walls are the foundation for its great hexagonal spire. If you look up at the crossing at the centre of the church, the ribbed vaulted ceiling seems to be in motion, rising up into the central tower. At least, that’s how it felt to me as I followed Emilie’s advice to lift up my eyes in Oxford. 

This tower, the church’s ten-petalled rose window, and the Great Quadrangle have shaped and continue to shape Oxford’s visual culture. As a place dedicated to learning and worship, the architects of Oxford structured their spaces in the form of the cross.  

But it took me longer to discern another essential feature of Oxford’s literary and spiritual architecture. It began on a Sunday morning.

Depending on your view, I was either very late for the 8:00 Eucharist or very early for the 10:00 Matins. Like a character from Dorothy L. SayersGaudy Night, the Christ Church porter had one of those bored, “another uninformed American tourist” look on his face as I hesitated. It was 8:50, and I had an hour to kill.  

Instead of loitering in the Quad under the porter’s disapproving eye, I found my way to Starbucks on Oxford’s busy Cornmarket Street. In one of the odd synchronicities of life—the saints call this “providence,” and the novelists call it “realism”—Dr. Laura Smit, an American theologian whose work I had read, walked into the coffee shop and said, “You’re Brenton Dickieson, aren’t you?” I was, and still am, and admitted as much. So we had coffee together.  

As it turns out, Laura was also early for Matins at Christ Church. I now had a guide to the world of High Anglican liturgy, a sacred multi-sensory space where the body engages in worship as the mind finds the words. It is a world very foreign to me, but one that echoes the pattern of the universe where Word becomes Flesh.  

And in another incarnation where the digital becomes analog, I had a friend at Christ Church. 

Oxonians believe that in order to explore the multiverse of human and divine knowledge, one needs both space and beauty. The beauty of Oxford’s architecture is enough to break your heart, and I knew that about Europe even before I landed. I even know about the shape of the cross in Oxford’s design. 

What I wasn’t expecting was the need for “wasted space,” which in Christian tradition is sacred space. 

By its very architecture, Christ Church draws the heart to centre and the eye to the ceiling. The Great Quadrangle, the Tom Quad, is also cruciform. The perfectly manicured lawn and paths crossing centre and circling the perimeter create the shape of a Celtic cross from the sky.  

In the famous fountain at the crossing stands the messenger of the gods, Hermes or Mercury, known in the Ransom Cycle universe as Viritrilbia. I don’t know if Mercury is singing odes to the gods, or raising his fist to the sky against them, or ready to launch off to lead heaven himself. I’ve never been able to get my mind around Mercury. 

As the porter had directed us, the Cathedral sits at one corner of the Quad. It isn’t often that beauty catches my breath, but this was one moment. From the dark hallway and checkerboard pavingstones, the walk into Christ Church’s marble arches gave the illusion of eternity—or perhaps was meant to give a hint of the reality beyond time and space.  

How can I describe this sanctuary? Apostolic scenes in hardwood, columns holding the weight of millennia, an altar of gold, stained glass stories tucked into the transepts—there are times when it is best to point to a digital panorama rather than try to do justice to the aesthetics.  

I trip across John Locke’s memorial stone on the floor as the pipe organ fills even the spiderweb rafters with sound. We sit on crushed velvet cushions, softer than the severe wooden pews that were designed to keep one’s mind and morals as straight as Renaissance spines. I do not know if the Bible is resting on a golden eagle or phoenix—each with its own mythic significance—but Scripture is not just for reading in the service. It reverberates in song as the boys’ choir rises to chants, hymns, and the call-and-response pattern that shapes the rhythms of both the body and the spirit.  

The scriptures are read, and we kneel. The gospel message and the stories of the saints are evoked in prayer. Song and story, voices and movement, the liturgy becomes one of those incarnations where spirit becomes flesh. While I imagine that I am inhabiting the church, it is that sacred space that is making its home in me. Even for those who come to church in the silence in between these services, the story is told in stained glass, moulded wood, and chiselled stone

And for those who have eyes to see and ears to hear, the story resonates in the wasted space. Silence, stillness, white space, unfilled margins, form without function, hollow shadowy regions far beyond our reach—Oxford’s theological design is both a fulfillment of and a resistance to Matthew Arnold’s description of the human vocation:  

“How changed is here each spot man makes or fills!” 

We make and fill. But even in these spots made by human hands—the untrod grass of scholarly quadrangles and the empty rafters of cruciform churches—we do not fill out all the spaces, as is our wont. While wasted space is an ugly blot in our technoculturally designed urban landscapes of map and mind, Oxford reminds us that we cannot—we must not—fill every space with our human making.

We must leave room for something else.  

Visual artists know the value of negative space. Filmmakers and preachers know the value of silence and stillness as much as they know light and motion. But when our making is economically refined and utilitarian, architects can get lost in filling space rather than shaping our experience of otherness in the unused, unknown, unseen, and unusable parts of the places we inhabit. Architects create emptiness as much as space to be filled.  

Writers, too, have a tendency to forget that not every vessel is made to be filled. My teaching partner, Ryan Drew, shared with me the word “skeuomorph” last night. Literally “a transformed vessel,” the word refers to the transformation of meaning that the vessel carries when it moves past its prime technological usage. Corinthian columns are rarely load-bearing anymore, and the chandelier in my dining room has electric lights in the shape of candle flames. Words can transform this way, too. “Digital” rarely refers to our fingers these days any more than the symbol for a phone has much connection to the dynamic computers we carry in our pockets and purses. Indeed, how often do we use our computers to compute? 

Mythological Detail on Greek Pottery

The word also reminds me that ornamental vases are never made to do what functional vases are manufactured for. So, while the vessel does not carry flowers or flour, water or wine, it still carries meaning. In its wasted space, it carries beauty.

To be a potter is to shape empty spaces. Some of these empty spaces we fill and empty, again and again. And some remain in that realm of what we call a waste, a lack, negative space. 

Our social imaginary—the way we collectively visualize our beliefs about what is real and possible—biases us toward usefulness. My Scottish-PEI cultural background demands usefulness. But the empty vase reminds us of St. Paul’s lesson about the artist and the clay: 

“When a potter throws a vessel on his wheel, who is to say except the potter himself whether he forms the lump of clay into something glorious or humble?” (Romans 9:21, BUV*) 

Potter’s Wheel image by Ami Looper

Even though I learned it a decade ago, I have forgotten this lesson. Like how the empty spots on my bookshelf magically fill with books, I unreflectively fill the wasted spaces of my day. In the fifteen-minute transition times, I slam off a few emails to save time later. I feel my ears with podcasts or audiobooks at every moment I’m away from a screen. I eat my breakfast while editing this draft. I am restless and always moving. The idea of jail terrifies me because there is nothing to do, nothing to read. Even to sleep, I must go through a series of mental exercises. Sleep has become hard work rather than meaningful, life-enriching, soul-filling wasted space. 

It is no wonder that I find it hard to discover meaning. The ideas come more slowly, and the aha! moment is rare. Prayers rarely happen to me by accident. I never finish the poems I start on scraps of paper or in my journal. Reading is my everyday work, but it is also my delight and my vocation. I stare endlessly at the screen and then struggle to keep my eyes pinned to pages I yearn to read. 

Though I am in the publication phase of a book on the cruciform—The Shape of the Cross in C.S. Lewis’s Spiritual Imagination—I have forgotten the other part of Oxford’s theological design: Wasted space is essential to intellectual, social, and spiritual transformation. 

Matthew Arnold captured something with his description of Oxford’s “dreaming spires.” He reminds us to look up. And he is right that as makers, we humans are also fillers of the spaces we make.  

However, in reclaiming the sacredness of wasted space, I am resisting his empire-building, fill-in-all-the-spaces vision of the world.  

Most of all, though, I am choosing to leave room in my crowded mind for the unusual, the unexpected, the unnecessary, the unbidden, the intangible, the ignoble, the uncomfortable, the impossible, and the Other. I need room to breathe, to dream, to look up. I need once again to become an architect of wasted space in my life.

*BUV: Brenton’s Unauthorized Version 

Note: A previous version of this piece put Sulva as the Mercury figure in the Ransom Cycle; truly, it is Viritrilbia, and I even made a handy “Planet Narnia Chart” so I wouldn’t forget. Ah well, it’s a very mercurial figure in all worlds.

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2024: My Year in Books: The Infographic

Happy New Year everyone! I wanted to share the Goodreads “My Year in Books” infographic, with some brief reflections to follow, I hope–though fewer charts this year. You can see the interactive online infographic here, or read on.

Last year, in line with whatever algorithms call tradition, Goodreads said to me, “Congratulations! You’re really good at reading, and probably a lot of other things, too!”

Apparently, I am no longer worthy of a compliment. However, I won 4 contests I had no idea existed, so that’s cool.

In 2025, I hope to win enough challenges that my bookmarks can be symmetrical. I don’t know what a Diamond Reader is, but I met my reading goal of 120 books this year (my own spreadsheet says 120, not 127). These are those books:

Here is the full infographic. Best wishes in the literary year to come!

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“The Genius of George MacDonald” at Yale: I’m Here! and How You Can Join Now Online

After driving 12 hours from Prince Edward Island to Hartford, Connecticut, I picked up someone at the airport that I met on the Internet. And he has offered me a place to stay near Yale University.

While this sounds like the setup to one of those brilliantly lit, chiclet-toothed, winning-smile Christmas horror films that Hallmark makes. But it is all okay. This face-on-the-screen newfound friend is Derek Holder, host and producer of The Plunge Podcast. More of this anon.

The reason I am at Yale is because of the final event in the George MacDonald Bicentennial celebration. I missed most of the events, but I was very pleased to be at the June GeoMac200 conference at Wheaton, Illinois. It was truly brilliant, and I was allowed to share a bit about MacDonald and L.M. Montgomery in her sesquicentennial—check out Maud150 posts, news, and events online. My talk there was titled

“George MacDonald’s Spiritual Theology of the Imagination and the Prophetic Critique of Anne of Green Gables.”

It was, I’m afraid, a grander title than my performance bore out.

I missed the other key event of the year, the conference at St. Andrews. But thanks to some small changes in the fabrics of space and time, I found I was able to attend this conference at Yale, “The Genius of George MacDonald.” Then I was asked to share some ideas about MacDonald’s natural imagination, creation theology, environmental vision and the like. I had been playing with a particular idea that rhymed with this theme, so I pitched the title, “Passports to the Geography of Fairyland: Experimental Field Notes on George MacDonald’s Socio-ecological Imaginary.”

Again, it is a grander promise than I could possibly keep, but I am looking forward to the talk tomorrow morning.

And now I am here!

And as I just now found out, you can be here too! At least in the virtual sense. You can register here for a $10 USD for the livestream. I’ve added conference details below. More later.

Description

“A Scot of genius” wrote G.K. Chesterton; “the greatest genius of this kind whom I know,” declared C.S. Lewis. For the nineteenth-century intellectual George MacDonald, the title of ‘genius’ applies not merely to the works of fantasy for which he is now most remembered. A veritable polymath, MacDonald made a significant impact on the intelligentsia of his era, engaging with writers and social reformers from John Ruskin, Lewis Carroll, and Mark Twain, to Matthew Arnold, Octavia Hill, and Josephine Butler. His ideas fundamentally shaped much contemporary thinking on faith and imagination in disciplines as diverse as literature, philosophy, theology, natural science, education, social justice, visual art, theatre, and even music.

In 2023 Dr Marilyn Piety of Drexel University envisaged an academic conference that would bring discussion and examination of MacDonald’s work — and its significance — back into wider discourse. Her conversations with Dr David Mahan of the Rivendell Institute at Yale University resulted in this gathering, in the very bicentenary month of MacDonald’s birth. Yale’s Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library holds the world’s largest collection of MacDonald materials, as will be showcased. In their keynote Drs Amanda Vernon and Kirstin Jeffrey Johnson will explore the import of these holdings in redressing errors and oversights in MacDonald scholarship, as well as providing ongoing revelations of the breadth and depth of MacDonald’s impact on his culture-changing contemporaries, and reflections on how his vocational praxis is perhaps more relevant now than ever. Scholars from a number of fields have gathered to analyze and discuss the significance and implications of MacDonald’s thinking and praxis. Dr Chelle Stearns has arranged an historic evening concert to examine — and experience — MacDonald’s revolutionary text PhantastesA Faerie Romance for Men & Women through responsive pieces by Gustav Holst, J.A.C. Redford, and Eric Paździora, and readings by Malcolm Guite. We hope that this conference will invoke yet further attentio into the wide-ranging work and legacy of this generative man of letters and of action.

Conference Schedule

Friday 13 December

8:30–Arrival and Coffee

9:00 — Welcome
David Mahan and Marilyn Piety

9:15 — Keynote: “A Genius for Then and Now: George MacDonald’s Generative Relationality”
Amanda Vernon and Kirstin Jeffrey Johnson

10:15 — Walk to Beinecke

10:30 — Beinecke Tour

12:00 — Lunch

14:00 — MacDonald, Science, and Pedagogy Science, and Pedagogy
MacDonald’s lifelong interest in science and his work as a pedagogue offer a framework for this panel. The first paper considers MacDonald’s embrace of the imagination as an instrument for apprehending reality, which heals a deep-seated cultural split between science and wonder. The second paper examines the connections between George MacDonald’s approach to formative education and that of A.J. Scott.

1. Kerry Magruder, “George MacDonald and the Scientific Imagination.”

2. Brian A. Williams, “Master and Disciple: A.J. Scott & George MacDonald on Education as Formation.”

15:00 — Coffee Break/Free Time

16:00 — MacDonald and Theology
This panel examines MacDonald’s complex relationship with Calvinist theology. The papers address this subject from various angles, as they explore, respectively, the relationship between MacDonald’s ‘holy imagination’ and Calvin’s ‘epistemic restraint,’ the role of the emotions in religious experience, and atonement theology.

1. Justin Bailey, “‘Great Souled, but Hard Hearted’: George Macdonald and John Calvin.”

2. Julie Canlis, “Soul-schism & Calvinism: MacDonald and the role of the emotions in religious experience.”

3. Trevor Hart, “‘Love working life through affliction and death’: MacDonald’s post-Calvinian account of the atonement.”

17:30 — Dinner (not provided, but we will try to organize groups)

19:30 — Lyrical Evening: “Phantastes: A Musical Journey Through the Land of Faerie”
In Marquand Chapel, Yale Divinity School
Featuring: pianist Benjamin Harding, soprano Juliet Andrea Papadopoulos, poet and scholar Malcolm Guite, composer JAC Redford, composer Eric Paździora, and concert organizer Chelle Stearns
(Concert sponsored by private donors, Templeton Honors College at Eastern University, and the Marquand Chapel Team at Yale Institute of Sacred Music)

Saturday 14 December

8:30 — Arrival and Coffee

9:00 — MacDonald Amongst the Philosophers
This panel places MacDonald in conversation with Classical and existentialist philosophers. The first paper considers MacDonald’s use of classical sources (including Plato, Epictetus, Euclid, and Virgil), and the second offers a comparative examination of Kierkegaard’s and MacDonald’s readings of the Greek New Testament.

1. Laurie Wilson, “Joining the Intellect and the Imagination: George MacDonald and the Classics.”

2. Marilyn Piety, “Ad Fontes: Kierkegaard and MacDonald on ‘Original Christianity.’”

10:00 — Coffee Break

10:30 — MacDonald and The Natural World
This panel considers MacDonald’s interest in the ecological. The first paper offers an excursion into MacDonald’s socio-ecological imaginary, before the second explores MacDonald’s impact on the Victorian artist-missionary Lilias Trotter and highlights their mutual understanding of nature as a window into divine truth.

1. Brenton Dickieson, “Passports to the Geography of Fairyland: Experimental Field Notes on George MacDonald’s Socio-ecological Imaginary.”

2. Jennifer Trafton, “Reading God’s Picture-Book: MacDonald’s Influence on Lilias Trotter’s Spiritual Vision.”

11:30 — Lunch and Free Time

1:00 — MacDonald the Steward of British Lit
This panel examines MacDonald in light of his work as a literary scholar. The first paper considers MacDonald’s engagement with Middle English poems in his anthology of religious lyrical poetry, England’s Antiphon.

The second paper examines MacDonald’s work on Shakespeare, and demonstrates his significance and relevance to Shakespeare studies both in his age and ours.

1. Karl Persson, “A Bridge Between Antiquarian Scholarship and Popular Piety George MacDonald’s Curation of Middle English Poetry in England’s Antiphon”

2. Joe Ricke, “‘Second only to the Bible’: George MacDonald, Shakespeare Scholar”

14:00 — Coffee into Breakout Groups

15:30 — Round Table
David Mahan, Malcolm Guite, Kirstin Jeffrey Johnson, and Amanda Vernon

17:00 — Thank-yous and Farewells

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11/22/63: The Day that C.S. Lewis Died

Canadians just are not as good as Americans when it comes to iconic days. Let’s be honest: Canada Day isn’t nearly as interesting as Independence Day, though we do have our quaint traditions in each hamlet, harbour, and neighbourhood. The American Civil War is one for history books, family legend, and blockbuster TV, while 10 to 1 odds it is unlikely the reader knows much about Canada’s founding moment, our Battle on the Plains of Abraham. From the landing of the Mayflower to 9/11, America sets its days in the hewn stones of history, while Canada plays YouTube reruns of Heritage Minutes, which are mostly cool things Canadians did without anyone knowing they were Canadian–and often before there was such a thing as “Canada.”

And some of them, we must admit, are lovely little stories about how we are not “Americans”:

The moment hit home for me on Aug 31, 1997, early in the morning on the East Coast. I can pinpoint where I was when I heard that Lady Diana died. It was a Sunday. I was on my way to my internship. I was driving down a side road of the little community as my new wife and I were preparing to move to the village the next day. I remember the announcer’s voice, the weather, and some sense of loss, even though I have little royal interest.

I sealed the memory within me in the way people sealed in Nov 22, 1963, the assassination of John F. Kennedy. My memory of Lady Di’s crash is perhaps chiefly due to my grandfather’s wry sense of humour. On the eve of Diana’s epic, international funeral, Mother Teresa quietly passed away. Most people were focussed on things other than a nun in India. My grandfather, a man of select words, commented:

“It really is poor timing on her part,” he said.
“Abominable timing,” I said.
“If she’d have thought it through, she might have waited,” he said.
“A real mistake in marketing,” I said.

On Feb 17, 2011, my grandfather died. It was a Thursday.

I am far too young to know the JFK moment as all middle-aged Americans do. I think I remember the death of John Lennon, also an assassination. I don’t remember any details as a five-year-old boy, except a general sense of sadness in the house. Strawberry fields forever and the like. It was a Monday.

Though Canadians are lacking in the area of great days, I feel free to borrow UK and, especially, American iconic moments. I remember all the minutes of 9/11. It was a Tuesday. I was in rural Japan when I heard what had happened from our American landlords. My wife and I drove to the top of a mountain to get the English radio station from the American installation at the Yokota Air Base on the Kanto Plains. Then we mourned with the motley crew of ex-patriots under the weepy trees of Karuizawa. It was an international day of grieving, but it was an American day. Though we came from all parts of the world, on 9/11 we were all kind of American.

Then there was 12/22/63.

In my own life, besides 9/11 and that week in June 1989 when things went bad in Tiananmen Square, there are dates I will never forget: Thursday, April 16, 1987; Sunday, Feb 4, 1990; Monday, Jul 2, 1990; Monday, Jan 3, 1994; Friday, May 9, 1997; Thursday, Nov 25, 2004; Friday, Feb 1, 2008. They are mine, not the world’s. No children salute as the motorcade of my memory travels by.

Despite the impact of 9/11, which is shaping American culture and politics up to this very minute these decades later, the weight of American days in memory is still evident on Nov 22, 1963. The death of Kennedy, which keeps appearing in this reflection on C.S. Lewis’ death, continues to appear in American consciousness. When he died in Dallas, the news overwhelmed all other news throughout the world.

There were many things that happened that day. A police officer died with Kennedy, didn’t he? The Beatles released their second album. The political tides were shifting in Asia. Americans died in Vietnam as children there lost their homes. Many people in the world died that day, including Aldous Huxley, the author of Brave New World and dozens of other books. This was also the day that Wilhelm Beiglböck died comfortably in his home after having made a career out of doing live human tests on Jews in concentration camps as if they were lab rats, which in his mind they were.

Most eyes were turned away from his death. Perhaps that is best.

My grandfather quipped that Mother Teresa should have planned her death better. It doesn’t surprise me that she slipped away without much fanfare. She may not have thought she was worth the fuss anyway.

I suppose my grandfather would also have criticized C.S. Lewis for his inopportune death. If dying during the week of Lady Di’s memorial was bad, dying on the 1960s day of days for a leading country of the world is even worse. But that is what happened. On Nov 22, 1963, while Americans were glued to their television sets and radios, the news that C.S. Lewis died quietly in his bedroom slipped out into the world. Lewis had been recovering from an episode in the summer, but his health faded quickly in November. Lewis was one week shy of his sixty-fifth birthday when he died. It was a Friday, as today is a Friday.

Almost no one paid attention to the death of one of the most popular authors of a generation. This probably would not have fazed Lewis, though he may have found it disappointing that neither his brother Warren nor his close friend Tolkien attended his funeral. I am not sure he ever really had a true sense of his importance as an author. He knew he had an audience because he responded to the fan letters that poured in for years. But the popularity never truly settled within him. According to his stepson, Douglas Gresham, Lewis told his lawyer he didn’t need a literary estate since he would be forgotten in five years’ time. With book sales in the hundreds of millions—The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe is steadily moving toward 100,000,000 copies alone—I would suggest Lewis underestimated his impact.

If Lewis was forgotten on the day he died, it is no longer the case 61 years later. 13 years ago, the semicentenary of Lewis’ passing became a year of jubilee. Beiglböck is mercifully forgotten. The Beatles are as important as ever, though I still miss John Lennon and they still aren’t as big as Jesus. Brave New World is a must-read, even if Aldous Huxley himself is obscured in time. 9/11 began a century—and marked the close of a century, I hope—though I’m not sure Tienanmen Square did either of these things. Mother Teresa was canonized and Lady Di’s children are always in the media. Doctor Who has nearly 700 episodes and is on its 15th Doctor, depending on how you count these things.

All calendar pages turn, and in the end, all days are just days. 61 years ago, C.S. Lewis finished his last day with tea. J.F.K.’s legacy is Cuba and Vietnam, Marilyn Monroe and the Moon, and the audacious idea that it was an American’s duty to serve, not to be served. Lewis’ legacy is far more modest: Oxford and Narnia, ink spots and tea stains, smoke rings and a few good words. I wonder, though, as we pass the few decades, if Lewis’ legacy may not continue to rise, while the days of America’s visionary martyr will prove to have been too short.

Perhaps JFK died too soon, or perhaps Lewis simply had more to say.

Only the Ancient of Days can know for certain. The voices of great men and almost all women have passed away, no doubt. All stone turns to sand, I suppose. But I have a feeling that C.S. Lewis’ words are engraved in our human experience. So, it is on this day that I think it is worth celebrating the artistic, literary, and spiritual legacy of C.S. Lewis. It is why I have dedicated years to helping American readers–and a few Canadians, Brits, and folks around the world, I suppose–see the transformative project that Lewis undertook.

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