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Encyclopedia > Eldila

The Space Trilogy or Ransom trilogy is a group of three science fiction novels by C. S. Lewis:

The books are not especially concerned with scientific accuracy or technological speculation, and in many ways they read like fantasy adventures. Like most of Lewis's mature writing, they have a thoroughly Christian outlook and much discussion of contemporary rights and wrongs.

Contents

Ransom

A philologist named Elwin Ransom is the hero of the first two novels and an important character in the third. He appears very similar to Lewis himself: a university professor, expert in languages and medieval literature, unmarried (Lewis did not marry until his fifties), wounded in World War I and with no living relatives except for one sibling. Lewis, however, apparently intended for Ransom to be partially patterned after his friend and fellow Oxford professor J.R.R. Tolkien, since Lewis is presented as novelizing Ransom's reminiscences in the epilogue of Out of the Silent Planet and is a character-narrator in the frame tale for Perelandra.


Eldila

The eldila (singular eldil) are a species of intelligent extraterrestrial. The human characters in the trilogy encounter them on various planets, but the eldila themselves are native to interplanetary and interstellar space ("Deep Heaven"). In standard science-fiction terms, they are "multi-dimensional energy beings." They are barely visible as faint, shifting light.


Certain very powerful eldila, the Oyéresu (singular Oyarsa), control the course of nature on each of the planets of the Solar System. They (and maybe all the eldila) can manifest in forms other than faint light.


The eldila are science-fictionalized depictions of angels, immortal and holy, with the Oyéresu perhaps being angels of a higher order (possibly in the traditional Hierarchy of angels). The eldila resident on (actually, imprisoned in) Earth are "dark eldila", fallen angels or demons. The Oyarsa of Earth is Satan.


Connections to Lewis's non-fiction

The cosmology of all three books—in which the Oyéresu of Mars and Venus somewhat resemble the corresponding gods from classical mythology—derives from Lewis's interest in medieval beliefs. Central concerns of his book The Discarded Image are the way medieval authors borrowed concepts from pre-Christian religion and science and attempted to reconcile them with Christianity, and the lack of a clear distinction between natural and supernatural phenomena (or between what are now called science fiction and fantasy) in medieval thought. The Space Trilogy also expands on Lewis's essay "Religion and Rocketry", which argues that as long as humanity remains flawed and sinful, our exploration of other planets will tend to do them more harm than good.


The Dark Tower

A fragmentary work featuring Ransom, The Dark Tower, was published in 1977 as a manuscript that Lewis had left unfinished at the time of his death. However, some have argued that The Dark Tower is a forgery.


Glossary

Some terminology in the "Old Solar" language is used throughout the trilogy:

  • Field of Arbol— the Solar System
  • Malacandra — Mars
  • Perelandra — Venus
  • Thulcandra — Earth

Some of this terminology can be linked up with Christian concepts:

  • Maleldil — God, or specifically Jesus (sometimes from the point of view of extraterrestrials who haven't heard that he was incarnated as a human being)
  • Eldila — Angels
  • Oyarsa — (Title) Ruler of a planet, a higher-order angel

  Results from FactBites:
 
Out of the Silent Planet - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (2141 words)
The eldila, who work for Oyarsa as messengers and maintainers of the planet, are meant to be angels.
Since the eldila, who fill space (or "the heavens," which are depicted as warm and bright due to the Sun) know nothing about what goes on inside those boundaries, Earth is called Thulcandra, "the silent planet." While Earth has fallen into evil, Mars has not.
All three of these races and the eldila are "unfallen": free of the tendency to evil and sin that plagues humans.
Space Trilogy - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (1494 words)
Certain very powerful eldila, the Oyéresu (singular Oyarsa), control the course of nature on each of the planets of the Solar System (note the similarity to the Valar, or the higher angels, in The Silmarillion).
The eldila are science-fictionalized depictions of angels, immortal and holy, with the Oyéresu perhaps being angels of a higher order (possibly in the traditional Hierarchy of angels).
The eldila resident on (actually, imprisoned in) Earth are "dark eldila", fallen angels or demons.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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