September 5-8, 2024
The C.S. Lewis Initiative presents The Inaugural Undiscovered C.S. Lewis Conference.
Join us for this multi-day event showcasing lesser-known scholarship on Lewis (from our keynote speakers and dozens of short papers), theatrical productions, an exclusive pre-screening of a Lewis and Tolkien documentary, and much more. The Undiscovered C.S. Lewis Conference celebrates the camaraderie, imagination, and faith of this great author and the many scholars and enthusiasts who follow in his footsteps. We can’t wait to see you here!
Check-in will open at noon on Thursday, September 5, and the conference will end with a lunch and send-off at noon on Sunday, September 8.
Tickets non-refundable as of July 28, 2024
Keynote Speakers & Schedule
Planet Narnia Revisited
Dr. Michael Ward is an associate member of the faculty of theology and religion at the University of Oxford and professor of apologetics at Houston Christian University. He is the author of the award-winning and best-selling Planet Narnia: The Seven Heavens in the Imagination of C.S. Lewis (Oxford University Press) and of After Humanity: A Guide to C.S. Lewis’s The Abolition of Man (Word On Fire Academic, 2021); he co-edited The Cambridge Companion to C.S. Lewis (Cambridge University Press) and presented the BBC television documentary, The Narnia Code. On the 50th anniversary of Lewis’s death, Dr Ward unveiled a permanent national memorial to him in Poets’ Corner, Westminster Abbey, London. He played the role of Vicar in the film The Most Reluctant Convert: The Untold Story of C.S. Lewis. In real life he is a Catholic priest, assisting at Holy Rood Church, Oxford, alongside his work as an academic.
What Did Tolkien Really Think about Narnia?
Dr. Holly Ordway is the Cardinal Francis George Professor of Faith and Culture at the Word on Fire Institute and visiting professor of apologetics at Houston Christian University. She holds a PhD in English from the University of Massachusetts Amherst and is a subject editor for the Journal of Inklings Studies. She is the author of Tolkien’s Modern Reading: Middle-earth Beyond the Middle Ages, which received the 2022 Mythopoeic Scholarship Award in Inklings Studies. Her book Tolkien’s Faith: A Spiritual Biography was released in 2023, in time for the 50th anniversary of Tolkien’s death.
“Never Trust a Philologist": Lewis, Tolkien, and the Oxford English School
Dr. Simon Horobin is professor of English language and literature and fellow and tutor in English at Magdalen College, University of Oxford. He has published widely on medieval literature and the English language. He has lectured to a variety of audiences on C.S. Lewis and has published articles on Lewis’s scholarly writings. He is the author of C.S. Lewis’s Oxford (Bodleian Publishing 2024), which examines the role that Oxford, its colleges, libraries, chapels, common rooms and pubs, played in fostering the work of one of the twentieth century’s most influential writers and thinkers.
C.S. Lewis in America
Dr. Stephanie L. Derrick is an award-winning historian of religion in the modern era, with a special interest in book and publishing history in Britain and America. She is the author of The Fame of C. S. Lewis: A Controversialist’s Reception in Britain and America (Oxford University Press, 2018) and editor of Chasing Paper: Critical Reflections on Christian Books and Publishing (Cascade Books, 2021).
Lewis the Expert Communicator: New Discoveries from His Writing and Speaking
Dr. Steven A. Beebe is Regents’ and University Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Communication Studies at Texas State University. He is author and coauthor of 14 books (with editions totaling more than 85 books) that have been used at hundreds of colleges and universities throughout the world. Dr. Beebe has been a visiting scholar at both Oxford University and Cambridge University and was elected a permanent member of the Common Room of Wolfson College, Oxford University. He made international headlines when conducting research at Oxford University, where he discovered an unpublished manuscript written by C. S. Lewis that was the partial opening chapter of a book that was to be coauthored with J. R. R. Tolkien. The National Speaker’s Association has named him Outstanding Communication Professor in America.
Lewis the Rubbish Administrator: Unpublished Vice President Records at Magdalen College
Dr. Jahdiel Perez is assistant professor of humanities and the sciences at Villanova University. In 2023, Perez earned his DPhil in theology and literature at the University of Oxford. His dissertation, supervised by Alister McGrath and Michael Ward, analyzed how C.S. Lewis reconciled joy and sorrow throughout his theological writings. While at Oxford, he was president of the Oxford C.S. Lewis Society and a doctoral fellow with the OCCA Oxford Centre for Christian Apologetics. Perez lives near Philadelphia with his wife Wendy and 2-year-old son Jezekiel.
Theatrical Productions
Tickets are included in the conference registration fee, but are also available for purchase by the general public on the George Fox Theatre webpage.
David Payne’s “An Evening with C.S. Lewis”
Critics have said that Payne’s one-man show is “extraordinary,” “a must-see,” and “a masterclass.” He “has become the world’s foremost actor in the world of Lewis,” having “performed as C.S. Lewis in more than 1,000 productions, in front of nearly 750,000 people.”
The show will take place on Friday, Sept. 6, at 7:30 p.m. in Bauman Auditorium.
George Fox Theatre Professor Ben Tissell is producing "Lewis & Tolkien: The Baptized Imagination.” This is an inventive, fast-paced production packed with humor and insight building on deep research to show the friendship of two of the greatest friends in literary history. Ben has acted with the Portland Center Stage at the Armory, Third Rail Repertory, Portland Playhouse, Broadway Rose Theatre, and other theater companies.
There will be two showings of this production on Saturday, Sept. 7, in Wood-Mar Auditorium. The first will be at 2 p.m. for the public; the second will be at 7:30 p.m. for conference attendees only.
Documentary Pre-Screening: The Forge of Friendship
The conference will feature an exclusive pre-screening of “The Forge of Friendship”—Eastgate Creative’s documentary on Lewis and Tolkien. The film includes contributions from many reputable scholars, such as Walter Hooper, Malcolm Guite, Alister McGrath, and John Garth.
If you would like to support the C.S. Lewis Initiative's mission of furthering student-led endeavors, curriculum enhancements, community engagement, and scholarly research and conferences, please consider donating here.
DonateTransportation and Lodging
We recommend that you fly into Portland International Airport (PDX) because it is the closest airport to the George Fox Campus. The drive is approximately 35 miles, and it typically takes between 45 minutes and 1 hour. We recommend that you factor in this driving time to your travel plans.
George Fox recommends the Hillsboro Airporter and Car Service for your transportation needs, alternatively, the Yamhill County Transit Area provides bus service within Newberg, and connections to the TriMet bus service that serves the greater Portland area.
We have secured hotel blocks in the Newberg area at discounted price at both the Holiday Inn Express and the Best Western, which can be utilized by contacting the undiscoveredlewis@georgefox.edu and asking for the booking link. There are many other great lodging options in the area, including hotels, motels, and Airbnbs. The following hotels also offer a 10% discount to George Fox affiliated events, so ask for the George Fox discount: Travelodge Suites, The Dundee, Hampton Inn and The Century Hotel.
Call for Papers
Scholars are invited to submit anonymized proposals of 300 to 500 words by March 31, 2024. Proposals should be for 20-minute papers in one of the six categories of our general theme “the undiscovered C.S. Lewis”:
- historical studies that set Lewis in his own time,
- reassessments that question, contest, reaffirm, or clarify previous interpretations of his work or biography,
- comparative studies of Lewis and other thinkers and writers,
- [re]assessments of Lewis’s work in light of our contemporary situation,
- explorations of his lesser-known material, and
- presentations of previously unpublished material by Lewis.
Proposals not specifically focused on Lewis but advancing scholarship on other Inklings or related writers are also welcome.
*Of note: In support of a working group on Lewis, Tolkien, and war convening simultaneously with the general conference, paper proposals examining these authors through the themes of war, martial character, military virtue, peacemaking, and war ethics, each broadly conceived, are also encouraged.
As a public-facing academic conference, we invite papers that are scholarly but accessible to a wider public audience. Submissions are welcome from scholars at every career stage, and limited scholarships are available for students and independent scholars.
Email submissions for peer-review consideration to undiscoveredlewis@georgefox.edu by March 31, 2024. Please anonymize your submission. Questions or inquiries prior to submission regarding the suitability of works may be directed to Dr. Jason Lepojärvi, jlepojarvi@georgefox.edu.
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