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The present research work is a study of the principal characters in five of Graham
Greene’s novels, namely, The Man Within (1929), England Made Me (1935), Brighton
Rock (1938), The Power and the Glory (1940), and The Heart of the Matter (1948), who
are simple and normal individuals, but who, for certain reasons or motivating factors,
become criminals, take recourse to crime, or sometimes become victims of crime or revolt
against autocratic attitude under circumstantial or environmental pressure. The study
explores and interprets the role of the individual in the prevailing environment and
highlights the importance of socio-environmental conditioning of human behaviour. For a
detailed and elaborated delineation of the psychopathology of these characters, the study
draws upon the relevant theories of criminology which are inextricably intertwined into the
intricate rubric of the present work, which can conspicuously be disseminated through the
viable division of the entire work into eight chapters. Chapter one begins with a discussion
of major influences on Greene’s art and mind and does also give a comprehensive account
of the major studies on Greene’s writings with which he presents the zeitgeist. Chapter two
deals with the theoretical framework in which relevant theories of criminology such as
‘rational choice theory’, ‘biosocial theory of personality and crime’, ‘trait theory’, ‘social
structure theory’ and ‘social conflict theory’ have been discussed which design a terra
firma for the present research work. To continue, the next chapter examines and explains
Greene’s first published novel, The Man Within, where the analytical part of the study
begins. It depicts and tries to understand Andrews’ act of betrayal and his divided
personality from both psychological and criminological points of view. Chapter four
considers how an individual like Anthony Farrant in Greene’s England Made Me is caught
up in the web of crime unleashed by the capitalist bourgeois group of Erik Krogh. Further,
the next chapter focuses on Greene’s novel, Brighton Rock, and analyses the character of
Pinkie Brown and tries to understand his criminal intent behind his deviant behaviour.
Chapter six uncovers Greene’s protagonist the priests’ action in the novel The Power and
the Glory from Marxist concept of ‘social conflict theory’. The next chapter examines how
the socio-psychological pressure as well as personal choice of Greene’s protagonist Henry
Scobie in the novel, The Heart of the Matter, ultimately costs his life at the end of the
novel. Finally, the concluding chapter begins with a short summary of the present study.
Thereafter a brief discussion of the findings of the present research work is presented as
simply and neatly as possible. |
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