These are very useful and interesting talks. But I am interested in your use of the word misogynistic, in the introduction and here. Throughout you illustrate the way that Lewis points to those things that are good and those which are not. I don't hear your demurring at all, except where Lewis shines light on the behaviour of Jane, who is encouraged not to behave 'like a modern woman'. In this video, just before 14 minutes, you point to one of the most joyful moments in the book with Jane surprised' by that joy and yet dismiss, almost scribble over, this 'misogynistic moment' in which Jane is told to ask her husband's permission to join him, 'which Jane finds horrendous and rightly so...' You are a wordsmith and I take it that you are using the word misogynist in its full meaning of hatred of women. Is it really hatred of women to suggest that they are different, or should behave differently in any way? If one thinks that they are no different, that they are spiritually identical, don't we get to the position in which we now are, in which no-one dares say the difference between a man and a woman.