Yahoo Suche Web Suche

Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. The Lawless Roads (1939) (published as Another Mexico in the United States) is a travel account by Graham Greene, based on his 1938 trip to Mexico, to see the effects of the government's campaign of forced anti-Catholic secularization and how the inhabitants had reacted to the brutal anti-clerical purges of President Plutarco Elías ...

    • Graham Greene
    • 1939
  2. 30. Jan. 2016 · Travelling through the dry, dusty, mosquito and tick fly riven states of Southern Mexico in the 1930s, a period when the Catholic Church was under severe persecution from the state, Green clings on to the two things that remind him of happier times and nations - his Englishness, and the Catholic Church.

  3. 25. Juni 2022 · Internet Archive. Language. English. xiv, 221 pages : 20 cm. Now with a new introduction by David Rieff, The Lawless Roads is the result of Graham Greene's expedition to Mexico in the late 1930s to report on how the inhabitants had reacted to the brutal anticlerical purges of President Calles.

  4. 29. März 2022 · English. 224 pages ; 20 cm. In 1938, Greene was commissioned to visit Mexico to discover how the inhabitants had reacted to the brutal anti-clerical purges of President Calles. His journey and the experiences he had there were the inspiration for The Power and the Glory. Originally published: London: Longmans, 1939. Notes.

  5. In the late 1930s, Graham Greene was commissioned to visit Mexico to report on how the inhabitants had reacted to the brutal anticlerical purges of President Calles. The Lawless Roads is his spellbinding record of that journey. Taking him through the tropical states of Chiapas and Tabasco, where all the churches had been destroyed or closed and ...

  6. The Lawless Roads. Graham Greene. Penguin Books, 1982 - Travel - 224 pages. In the late 1930s, Graham Greene was commissioned to visit Mexico and find out how the inhabitants had reacted to...

  7. Hailed by William Golding as “the ultimate chronicler of twentieth-century man’s consciousness and anxiety,” Greene would draw on the experiences of The Lawless Roads for one of his greatest novels, The Power and the Glory.