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'Oh, of course, one accepts the Gospels, naturally': Subversive Use of the Bible in Graham Greene's Monsignor Quixote
2020
Interlitteraria
When Graham Greene wrote Monsignor Quixote (published in 1982), one of his aims was to reflect critically on the role of the Catholic Church in the Spain of the late 1970s, as well as on the support this institution offered to the former dictatorship of Franco within the so called 'National Catholicism.' In this novel, the reader witnesses the evolution of the protagonist, Father Quixote, from a religious living a complacent life in a small village in La Mancha to a priest in rebellion against
doi:10.12697/il.2020.25.1.16
fatcat:eywhoq7xafajzicn7kk7wvqfte