Go offline with the Player FM app!
A Meal of Thorns 04 – PERELANDRA with Taylor Driggers
Manage episode 460740640 series 3583671
Taylor Driggers joins us to talk about the second volume in C.S. Lewis's SPACE TRILOGY. A richly-described and philosophical science fiction story, PERELANDRA has a lot that's interesting and a lot that's pretty weird when you think about it.
A Meal of Thorns is a podcast from the Ancillary Review of Books.
Credits:
- Guest: Taylor Driggers
- Title: Perelandra by C.S. Lewis
- Music by Giselle Gabrielle Garcia
- Artwork by Rob Patterson
- Opening poem by Bhartṛhari, translated by John Brough
References:
- Queering Faith in Fantasy Literature: Fantastic Incarnations and the Deconstruction of Theology by Taylor Driggers
- The Ursula Le Guin Archives
- Laurie Marks’ Elemental Logic novel series
- Philophantast conference
- The Centre for Fantasy and the Fantastic at the University of Glasgow
- Dead Collections by Isaac Fellman (and our episode on it)
- The Two Doctors Górski by Isaac Fellman
- The other two novels in the Space Trilogy: Out of the Silent Planet and That Hideous Strength
- Lewis’s The Chronicles of Narnia
- The Inklings (wiki link)
- Lewis’s A Grief Observed
- Lewis’s final novel Till We Have Faces
- Ursula Le Guin’s review of Lewis’s The Dark Tower
- Lewis’s The Great Divorce, Pilgrim’s Regress, and The Screwtape Letters
- Stephen Metcalf, “Language and Self-Consciousness: The Making and Breaking of C.S. Lewis’ Personae” in Word and Story in C. S. Lewis: Language and Narrative in Theory and Practice ed. Peter J. Schakel & Charles A. Huttar
- Lewis’s debate with Elizabeth Anscombe
- J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings
- Ridley Scott’s Alien
- “Sehnsucht”, the concept of inconsolable longing
- The Transformers franchise
- Aamer Rahman on defeating Nazis
- Satan (Milton’s version)
- Le Guin’s The Left Hand of Darkness and specifically the religion/philosophy of the Handdara
- Sofia Samatar’s The Practice, The Horizon, and the Chain
- Casella’s essay on (not) defending science fiction against criticisms of complicity
- Taylor’s seminar for his work with the Le Guin Fellowship on historicizing queerness in fantasy and “queer hiddenness in the archive”, available online this fall/winter.
- Greg Egan’s “Oracle”, available on his site (and in the collections Oceanic and The Best of Greg Egan)
Contact
RSS feed | Spotify | Apple Podcasts | +lots of other platforms (let us know if it’s not on your favorite)
You can follow A Meal of Thorns on Twitter and Bluesky.
Email us at [email protected].
Support the Show!
You can support the podcast (and the Ancillary Review of Books) by joining our Patreon. For $5 and up, you get access to ARB's exclusive monthly newsletter, our Discord community, and more to come.
Interested in purchasing a book we mentioned on the show? Check the show notes for Bookshop links; we get a cut if you buy them through our Bookshop!
It seems small, but it really does help: like and share our posts! Leave a comment or review wherever you find us. The internet's kind of broken, but that kind of thing really does help people hear about the work we're doing.
31 episodes
Manage episode 460740640 series 3583671
Taylor Driggers joins us to talk about the second volume in C.S. Lewis's SPACE TRILOGY. A richly-described and philosophical science fiction story, PERELANDRA has a lot that's interesting and a lot that's pretty weird when you think about it.
A Meal of Thorns is a podcast from the Ancillary Review of Books.
Credits:
- Guest: Taylor Driggers
- Title: Perelandra by C.S. Lewis
- Music by Giselle Gabrielle Garcia
- Artwork by Rob Patterson
- Opening poem by Bhartṛhari, translated by John Brough
References:
- Queering Faith in Fantasy Literature: Fantastic Incarnations and the Deconstruction of Theology by Taylor Driggers
- The Ursula Le Guin Archives
- Laurie Marks’ Elemental Logic novel series
- Philophantast conference
- The Centre for Fantasy and the Fantastic at the University of Glasgow
- Dead Collections by Isaac Fellman (and our episode on it)
- The Two Doctors Górski by Isaac Fellman
- The other two novels in the Space Trilogy: Out of the Silent Planet and That Hideous Strength
- Lewis’s The Chronicles of Narnia
- The Inklings (wiki link)
- Lewis’s A Grief Observed
- Lewis’s final novel Till We Have Faces
- Ursula Le Guin’s review of Lewis’s The Dark Tower
- Lewis’s The Great Divorce, Pilgrim’s Regress, and The Screwtape Letters
- Stephen Metcalf, “Language and Self-Consciousness: The Making and Breaking of C.S. Lewis’ Personae” in Word and Story in C. S. Lewis: Language and Narrative in Theory and Practice ed. Peter J. Schakel & Charles A. Huttar
- Lewis’s debate with Elizabeth Anscombe
- J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings
- Ridley Scott’s Alien
- “Sehnsucht”, the concept of inconsolable longing
- The Transformers franchise
- Aamer Rahman on defeating Nazis
- Satan (Milton’s version)
- Le Guin’s The Left Hand of Darkness and specifically the religion/philosophy of the Handdara
- Sofia Samatar’s The Practice, The Horizon, and the Chain
- Casella’s essay on (not) defending science fiction against criticisms of complicity
- Taylor’s seminar for his work with the Le Guin Fellowship on historicizing queerness in fantasy and “queer hiddenness in the archive”, available online this fall/winter.
- Greg Egan’s “Oracle”, available on his site (and in the collections Oceanic and The Best of Greg Egan)
Contact
RSS feed | Spotify | Apple Podcasts | +lots of other platforms (let us know if it’s not on your favorite)
You can follow A Meal of Thorns on Twitter and Bluesky.
Email us at [email protected].
Support the Show!
You can support the podcast (and the Ancillary Review of Books) by joining our Patreon. For $5 and up, you get access to ARB's exclusive monthly newsletter, our Discord community, and more to come.
Interested in purchasing a book we mentioned on the show? Check the show notes for Bookshop links; we get a cut if you buy them through our Bookshop!
It seems small, but it really does help: like and share our posts! Leave a comment or review wherever you find us. The internet's kind of broken, but that kind of thing really does help people hear about the work we're doing.
31 episodes
All episodes
×Welcome to Player FM!
Player FM is scanning the web for high-quality podcasts for you to enjoy right now. It's the best podcast app and works on Android, iPhone, and the web. Signup to sync subscriptions across devices.