Here we
come to the end of The Chronicles of
Narnia. While it certainly pulls out
all the stops for the final saga, it’s not one of my favorites in the
series. Despite some interesting
characters and intriguing ideas, it doesn’t quite come together for me (to be
fair, endings are ludicrously hard, and it seems that, the longer your series
goes on, the harder it is to end in a satisfactory manner.) A few spoilers.
When a
crafty ape named Shift discovers a lion skin, he gets the idea to dress up his
gullible and easy-led friend Puzzle (a donkey) and pass him off as Aslan, the
better to gain power. Dark days quickly
descend on Narnia, with Shift forcing Narnians to bend to his selfish will and
opening the doors to further abuses from Calormen. King Tyrian, along with Eustace and Pole, try
to fight the influence of Shift’s false Aslan and return Narnia to as it should
be, but this is a war not easily won.
The idea
of a false Aslan and an opportunistic creature handing Narnia over to Calormen
for profit is a good one, and there are some interesting ruminations on the
nature of gods and belief. The allegory
runs deep here, mingling Narnian lore with end-times notions throughout. I also enjoy Eustace and Pole’s interactions
with Tyrian – it’s a neat dynamic, how he’s a seasoned king but he clearly
understands their place in Narnian history, fully believes it, and treats them
with due respect.
Unfortunately,
with the return appearance of Calormen is the return of Lewis’s racist
depiction of a nonspecified Middle-Eastern-like society. He resumes the constant unfavorable
comparisons between the two countries, with everything Calormene being inferior
to its Narnian equivalent, and a few minor characters actually use racial
insults, calling the Calormenes “darkies.”
The story
also supports the argument I made quite a long time ago about the series
supporting imperialism. Shift is the
first non-humanoid ruler of Narnia we see, and what happens as soon as control
is out of the hands of a human? He immediately
uses his power for his own gain, starts strip the country of its resources, and
sells his fellow Narnians into slavery.
(Granted, the White Witch and Miraz prove that humanoid rulers haven’t
always served Narnia well, but its first Narnian ruler is both cruel and incompetent,
quickly losing control of the whole thing and ceding power to the
Calormenes.) It’s up to the human Tyrian
and two human children to put things right.
Meanwhile, while there are some heroic Narnians like Jewel, many of them
are portrayed almost like helpless children, easily manipulated and desperate
for someone to tell them what to do. I
still don’t know how much of it was intentional on Lewis’s part, but it sure
feels like the poor, uncouth Narnians need the civilized (English) humans to handle
the business of governance, because they can’t be left to their own devices –
not cool.
Warnings
Violence,
thematic elements, scary stuff, and racial insensitivity.
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