Informing the Inklings: George MacDonald and the Victorian Roots of Modern Fantasy

Author:   Michael Partridge ,  Kirstin Jeffrey Johnson ,  Stephen Prickett
Publisher:   Winged Lion Press, LLC
ISBN:  

9781935688426


Pages:   272
Publication Date:   23 October 2020
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
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Informing the Inklings: George MacDonald and the Victorian Roots of Modern Fantasy


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Author:   Michael Partridge ,  Kirstin Jeffrey Johnson ,  Stephen Prickett
Publisher:   Winged Lion Press, LLC
Imprint:   Winged Lion Press, LLC
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.90cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.567kg
ISBN:  

9781935688426


ISBN 10:   1935688421
Pages:   272
Publication Date:   23 October 2020
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

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Reviews

This marvelous collection of essays appeals to both the intellect and the imagination, drawing us to consider stories from a past generation as doorways for meaning and transformation today. The connection between George MacDonald and his circle to C. S. Lewis and his circle has never been made so clear. Bruce R. Johnson, General Editor of Sehnsucht: The C. S. Lewis Journal Unlike many books about the Inklings, which primarily just rehash what has already been published before, Informing the Inklings offers original and important insights over and over again. Timothy Larsen, Wheaton College, author of George McDonald in the Age of Miracles The scope of these well-arranged and very accessible pieces is extraordinary, bringing out a central purpose in the Inklings - the making of myth - with its debt to nineteenth-century fantasy. Colin Duriez, author of The Oxford Inklings I was once told that If you don't know George, you don't know Jack . Having read this fine collection, I know more about both Jack and George (and a good many other writers besides), and I 'm grateful. Michael Ward, University of Oxford, co-editor of The Cambridge Companion to C.S. Lewis.


Author Information

Michael Partridge was born in what he likes to call the East Anglian part of Essex and now lives in Cheshire. In 1995 he created The Golden Key web site (www.george-macdonald.com), online home to the George MacDonald Society where he is responsible for membership and online presence. A Fellow of the Chartered Insurance Institute, he retired after 40 years in insurance and has recently completed a Graduate Diploma in Theology with the Westminster Theological Centre/ University of Chester with whom he is now continuing his MA studies. Kirstin Jeffrey Johnson is an independent scholar based in the Ottawa Valley, Canada, and director of the Linlathen Lectures. Her doctorate at University of St Andrews, Scotland, was on the 'Relational & Revelational Nature of MacDonald's Mythopoeic Art'. She has tutored students in Inklings studies in Oxford, and currently lectures internationally on MacDonald, Tolkien, and Lewis. Dr Jeffrey Johnson is on the Advisory Board of the Inklings journal VII: An Anglo-American Literary Review, a member of the Canadian Inklings Institute, and a regular contributor to ArtWay journal. A list of her publications and lectures may be found at kirstinjeffreyjohnson.com, and her book Storykeeper: The Mythopoeic Making of George MacDonald is forthcoming. She also wrote the introduction and afterword for the Romanian translation of The Golden Key (Aula Magna, 2016), and is one of the MacDonald specialists in Andrew Wall's documentary, The Fantasy Makers: Tolkien, Lewis, & MacDonald (2018). An honorary Professor of English at the University of Kent at Canterbury, and Regius Professor Emeritus of English Language and Literature at the University of Glasgow, his academic honours are too many to name. Stephen was born in Sierra Leone, educated in Canterbury, studied both at Oxford & Cambridge (with CS Lewis as one of his tutors), and taught in Nigeria before completing a Ph.D. in Cambridge in 1968. He continued to teach in universities quite literally around the world in such countries as the U.S., Australia, Singapore, Denmark, Italy, France, Romania, Denmark, and of course England and Scotland (and was a guest lecturer in many many more). He was Chair of English at the Australian National University and Director of the Armstrong Browning Library at Baylor (in addition to being a professor there). He was a Fellow of the Australian Academy of the Humanities and the English Association, Chairman of the U.K. Higher Education Foundation, President of the European Society for the Study of Literature and Theology, and President of the George MacDonald Society.

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