Dr. Ramirez
Graham Greene. The Power and
the Glory
Part II. Ch. 4 - III Ch. 1-2
Review of themes in Part II
Themes: Greene uses Darwinist
ideas in his novel.
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Fighting the dog for a bone
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The fastest priests survive; those
who linger face danger
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Representation of Indians as weaker,
unable to resist the hegemony of the Mexican government
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Distrust of hybrid--mestizo
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Survival of the Church through small
pockets of resistance--spread power and disseminate and therefore ensure
its survival
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Tension between the grotesque physicality
of life and the evasive spiritual life
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The vultures are part of the chain
of life
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In stripping the finer things in life,
we return to the essence of being
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Reason and faith
Chapter 4
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Ambivalence
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Difference between humans and (other)
animals is that animals don't know despair; they keep holding onto life
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British literature unfamiliar to the
priest; he doesn't recognize the Whigs and Tories
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The priest fights with the dog over
a bone; he uses his survival instincts
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English verse turns on his lips; seems
too advanced for a child
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Greene represents Indians as both primitive
and inscrutable--he doesn't misread their blankness of expression as lack
of feeling
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Priest experiences the burden of prayer
after the child dies
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Storm: represents cleansing and danger
and partakes in the Bible's deluvian imagery
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Indian mother totes her son; this makes
visible the burden of life and death
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Chapter ends in hope
Part III
Chapter 1:
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Greene invokes through the Lehrs the
idea that Catholics aren't real Christians (162)
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The priest gives into temptation by
drinking with brandy from Pedro 169
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Miss Lehr more receptive to the priest,
but must hide her devotion from her stricter brother 175
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The Yankee is Catholic, a new twist
178
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Half caste meets the priest and takes
him to the Americano
Chapter 2
Priest tries to offer absolution,
a sense of clarity that he doesn't have.