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Here is a book which offers an original and comprehensive view of the thematic development in Greene's major novels from the mid-1920s to the late 1970s, cutting across the conventional distinction between the Catholic and non-Catholic phase, and illuminating the painful spiritual autonomy within which Greene's characters are impelled to operate in the twentieth-century wasteland, both in the ostensibly religious novels and in the later works.
This book examines Bakhtin as a Modernist, "exilic" thinker, engaged with the question of ethical subjectivity, aligned with contemporary Continental philosophers such as Bergson, Merleau-Ponty, and Levinas, and positioned at a crossroads of the human sciences.
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