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That Hideous Strength is a novel by C. S. Lewis first published in 1945. It is the third in Lewis's theological science fiction series, the Space Trilogy which features the philologist Elwin Ransom. This novel follows Out of the Silent Planet and Perelandra (a.k.a. Voyage to Venus). It is heavily influenced by the writing of Lewis's friend Charles Williams. The book is heavily dystopian in style.PlotThis final novel in the trilogy is a parable of the battle between man’s sinful pride and God’s will. It is set in post-war England in a small university town in which a research agency called N.I.C.E. (National Institute for Coordinated Experiments), led by fallen eldils, attempts to destroy the true nature of mankind. The N.I.C.E. represents man’s prideful greed to conquer nature and to make himself ever better, until he has conquered the last remaining piece of nature – human nature – making true man a lost memory. Dr. Ransom represents the watchful Christian, who is willing to be used by God at any moment. Additionally, Merlin, using the "angels’" powers, symbolizes that only through the God’s almighty power can the battle against the forces of darkness end in victory. Together, these characters provide a prophetic fiction that describes what could happen if mankind continues along his current scientific path.The story centres around a young professor and his wife who are affected in different ways by the so-called science being practiced at the Institute. The professor is targeted for recruitment into the "objectivists," the inner circle of researchers who associate directly with diabolic intelligences. One of the reasons they have for recruiting him is to get control of his wife, who is plagued by disturbing, clairvoyant dreams which she lacks the wisdom to interpret. However, she is driven, partly by N.I.C.E.'s attempt to arrest her, to join a small community of people in the service of the supernatural powers opposing the Institute. This community is nominally led by Ransom, still suffering from the wound he received from Professor Weston in his climactic fight on Venus. Here he appears as the Pendragon, the modern inheritor of the role of King Arthur. His Masters' plan is to use a mortal as a conduit for their power. However, Ransom's soul is "virginal" in this way, so he must recruit an older and more ambiguous agent, who has previously dealt with supernatural powers: the reawakened wizard Merlin. Influences on the novel and themesThis novel, unlike the previous two, shows the influence of Charles Williams to the extent that it might be considered either an homage or a pastiche. Similarities to Williams' supernatural thrillers include the non-exotic setting, the gathering of an informal team of heroes rather than a single protagonist, the focus on a temporarily estranged married couple, and the use of Arthurian legend. There are also brief nods to J. R. R. Tolkien, and the character MacPhee is an affectionate parody of Lewis's former teacher W. T. Kirkpatrick. Olaf Stapledon influences the story indirectly. The description of the "Head" is similar to that of the Fourth Men in Last and First Men. In the book's preface, Lewis said of Stapledon "...Mr Stapledon is so rich in invention that he can well afford to lend, and I admire his invention (though not his philosophy) so much that I should feel no shame to borrow".Another significant difference of this final volume is that, although the story is told from the perspective of multiple characters (including a bear!), Ransom is not among them, so we do not really get an in-depth understanding of his view of human society in light of his experiences among the angels and the sinless mortal beings who live on the other worlds. He is thus a much more remote character in this novel than in the previous volumes of the Space Trilogy. The novel's central theme—that pure materialism is incompatible with ethics and, ultimately, with human life—is, as Lewis stated, based on his own earlier philosophical treatise The Abolition of Man. An extreme example of this theme is his portrayal of the leaders of N.I.C.E., two of whom (Frost and Wither) have become nihilists with no recognizably human motives as a result of their quest for a purely objective mode of thought. The novel is also Lewis's most overtly political fiction, illustrating how the alliances of state, industry, and academia and the manipulation of the mass media might move England toward fascism. Like the dialogue between the Martian Oyarsa and Prof. Weston in Out of the Silent Planet, the discussion between Ransom and the reawakened Merlin in this book dramatizes Lewis's quarrels with modern Western materialistic culture. Lewis's criticism is conservative in many ways, but also overlaps in some aspects with left-wing critique of global capitalism. [ Visit the complete Wikipedia entry for That Hideous Strength ] Some related entries: Something Wicked this Way Comes | Halsbury's Statutes | Spirits in Bondage | The Secret Garden | E Pluribus Unicorn | The Demolished Man | SCUM Manifesto | The Dwarf | Herzog | Junk | Efter floden This page is based on the copyrighted Wikipedia article That Hideous Strength; it is used under the GNU Free Documentation License. You may redistribute it, verbatim or modified, providing that you comply with the terms of the GFDL. | Searches on eBay |
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