I agree with crazycigirl that to make the Emerald Witch "Jadis reborn" would be saying Aslan never truly defeated her, which would make Jadis just as or more powerful, which we all know is not true.
One thing that contributed to the confusion was a comment in a cover blurb in one of the versions that said they were. This blurb was written by some anonymous hack at the publisher who knew nothing about the stories; nevertheless, that offhand comment affected a lot of people's thinking about it.I'd say they're different, but what could imply / suggest they are the same?
One thing that contributed to the confusion was a comment in a cover blurb in one of the versions that said they were. This blurb was written by some anonymous hack at the publisher who knew nothing about the stories; nevertheless, that offhand comment affected a lot of people's thinking about it.
To add to the confusion, I understand that in the BBC series, the same actress played both Jadis and the Queen of Underworld, which would strengthen the correlation for those who saw it (I didn't).
We've had this discussion in other threads, and the conclusion is always the same: there's no support in the text of the stories for the idea that the Queen of Underworld is Jadis.
And remember the line in the books that says "Though Under Earth and Throneless Now I be, while I lived, All Earth was Under Me!
Now it is possible that that line was spoken by Jadis. After Aslan killed her in LWW, she took another appearance(the Emerald Witch) in Underworld. So she is "Under Earth" and "Throneless." But while she lived(as the White Witch) she ruled. Thinking she was on top of the world she claimed "All Earth was Under ME!" So that is on hint that they are they are the same.
Josh said:And remember the line in the books that says "Though Under Earth and Throneless Now I be, while I lived, All Earth was Under Me!
Now it is possible that that line was spoken by Jadis. After Aslan killed her in LWW, she took another appearance(the Emerald Witch) in Underworld. So she is "Under Earth" and "Throneless." But while she lived(as the White Witch) she ruled. Thinking she was on top of the world she claimed "All Earth was Under ME!" So that is on hint that they are they are the same.
So most of the reasons that leed to such conclusion are external to the books, therefore, don't count. Now that quote, Josh, is part of the books and needs to be thought of, but why would that relate specifically to Jadis? Just because she is the most powerful evil witch that appears in the series? If Lewis intended it to be so, wouldn't he be more specific on the matter, or add other quotes that pointed to that?
The only thing that seems clear to me is that people keep insisting upon seeing a connection where none exists. Lewis wasn't that tight a writer (a point that Tolkien made again and again). He just didn't get that complicated with his writing, and he wasn't the type to get into reincarnation and such. That toss-off comment toward the end of the book, the one already quoted about "those Northern witches" (note the plural) is the closest connection between the two different characters.
You could speculate some of these things about Charles Williams, perhaps, but not C.S. Lewis.
I agree with you there Elentari, they do not act the same. And that is because they are not the same.
Similarities:
1. They both are witches.
2. They both spent a conciderable amount of Narnia-time in the land north of Narnia.
3. They both are evil.
.
Differences:
1. Jadis doesn't do a good job of mimicing human emotion, LotGK does.
2. Jadis seems more powerful in magic than LotGK.
3. They are described differently.
4. They have different MO's.