As with 'The Lord of the Rings' the CGI capabilities of the 21st century enabled Lewis's work to be revived through a blockbuster movie, with 'The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe' (2005). The scene in which the White Witch, Jadis, (very well played by Tilda Swinton who has a suitably otherworldly demeanour; the witch is white because she is icy rather than good) sneers at the boy Edmund Pevensie who betrayed his friends to her in return for sweets (he had admittedly come from Britain in the Second World War where sweets were unavailable) is a good lesson for today's very demanding youth.
Anyway, as with any decent fantasy novel, there is a map. Narnia, by the way, is named after a city North of Rome in ancient times. Like Tolkien and Robert E. Howard (more on him another post), Lewis drew on his knowledge of the Classical world to provide names and locations. He also used other cultures, for example Jadis comes from the Turkish word for witch. So, below is a selection of maps of his Narnia:
Whereas Tolkien's Middle Earth faces North-West, Narnia seems to face East. Wildlands or wastes of the North seem a common element, and probably reflects authors coming from northern Europe and North America. Maybe the fantasy worlds of authors from the Mediterranean, Africa or South America would be very different. I suppose another thing is that you need wide plains to ride across in dramatic fantasies and to counter this maybe why when we turn to the work of Le Guin and Moorcock who eschew their predecessors, you have lots of archiepelagos instead.
4 comments:
Thank you for the background 411 about the maps, and of JRR Tolkein and CS Lewis (on my list of favorite authors).
All the best!
`jam
As commentator acute alerted me, there is actually now a link from Wikipedia to this posting. It comes at the bottom of the entry entitled 'Narnia (world)' in the section entitled 'External Links' with the link title 'Six Maps of Narnia'. This entry is about the background to the Narnia stories rather than the plots which are handled in numerous other entries.
See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Narnia_(world)
I do wonder what might be the impression of Narnia fans ending up at this blog and I am surprised that more Narnia fansites are not up and running carrying the kind of information I have easily secured to include here.
I recognize the first map as being the Disney/Walden map from the 2004 release of The Lion, The Witch, and the Wardrobe, and the second one is Pauline Baines's map, seen in the books, but I don't recognize any of the others. Do you have sources?
Not after all this time. I just picked these up from a random search of the internet back then. I did not even know they were associated with particular versions of the books or with the movies, and clearly some are home made. I guess you could simply do a search, but whether they are where they were over five years ago, I have no idea. None of them were copy-protected at the time and that may have changed too.
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