Abstract:This study argues that the anti-hero Pinkie in Graham Greene's first overtly religious novel Brighton Rock (1938) echoes Danish existentialist Kierkegaard's aesthetic way of life, devoid of ideal and courage. Being the first phase in Kierkegaard's three-fold existential ladder (theory of stages) into the fully authentic identity, the aesthetic stage carries in itself the seeds of a fulfilled selfhood. As such, with its plots and themes, Brighton Rock experiments with the capacity of such an aesthetic life to … Show more
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