This study explores the ways in which Catholic images, statues, and icons haunt the fictional, spiritual wasteland of Greene’s writing, nicknamed ‘Greeneland’. It is also prompted by a real space, discovered by Greene during his 1938 trip to Mexico, which was subsequently fictionalised in The Power and the Glory (1940), and which he described as ‘a short cut to the dark and magical heart of faith’. This is a space in which modern notions of disenchantment meets a primal need for magic – or the miraculous – and where the presentation of concepts like ‘salvation’ are defamiliarised as savage processes that test humanity. This brutal nature of faith is reflected in the pagan aesthetics of Greeneland which focus on the macabre and heretical ima...
The eight novels of Graham Greene offer the reader a penetrating and provocative analysis of certain...
This thesis examines a representative range of Graham Greene‟s works, mostly novels published betwee...
The religious acts of self-sacrifice and martyrdom, rarely identified or discussed in works of criti...
An examination of Graham Greene, his writing, and its relationship with Catholic teachings through a...
Graham Greene's work, especially his major novels, reveals his probing interest in religious matters...
Greeneland, the name that scholars have given to the world Graham Greene’s characters inhabit, is co...
The English novelist and convert to Catholicism, Graham Greene (1904-1991), saw the priest as being ...
This thesis is a study of the theology of Graham Green- a widely acclaimed British novelist, 1904-19...
An evaluation of Graham Greene\u27s Brighton Rock as it apprehends the Catholic novel as form. With ...
What Graham Greene identified as the religious dimension in his novels is not limited to Catholici...
Beliefs a writer holds dear clearly influence the selection and treatment of ideas in his fiction: t...
This thesis considers the development of Evelyn Waugh's and Graham Greene’s Catholicism between 1928...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Boston UniversityPLEASE NOTE: Boston University Libraries did not receive an Authori...
Graham Greene is perhaps one of the first novelists that springs to a contemporary mind when Catholi...
Culture and religion are supplementary to each other. Religion defines culture. According the religi...
The eight novels of Graham Greene offer the reader a penetrating and provocative analysis of certain...
This thesis examines a representative range of Graham Greene‟s works, mostly novels published betwee...
The religious acts of self-sacrifice and martyrdom, rarely identified or discussed in works of criti...
An examination of Graham Greene, his writing, and its relationship with Catholic teachings through a...
Graham Greene's work, especially his major novels, reveals his probing interest in religious matters...
Greeneland, the name that scholars have given to the world Graham Greene’s characters inhabit, is co...
The English novelist and convert to Catholicism, Graham Greene (1904-1991), saw the priest as being ...
This thesis is a study of the theology of Graham Green- a widely acclaimed British novelist, 1904-19...
An evaluation of Graham Greene\u27s Brighton Rock as it apprehends the Catholic novel as form. With ...
What Graham Greene identified as the religious dimension in his novels is not limited to Catholici...
Beliefs a writer holds dear clearly influence the selection and treatment of ideas in his fiction: t...
This thesis considers the development of Evelyn Waugh's and Graham Greene’s Catholicism between 1928...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Boston UniversityPLEASE NOTE: Boston University Libraries did not receive an Authori...
Graham Greene is perhaps one of the first novelists that springs to a contemporary mind when Catholi...
Culture and religion are supplementary to each other. Religion defines culture. According the religi...
The eight novels of Graham Greene offer the reader a penetrating and provocative analysis of certain...
This thesis examines a representative range of Graham Greene‟s works, mostly novels published betwee...
The religious acts of self-sacrifice and martyrdom, rarely identified or discussed in works of criti...