Vertical Man

The Human Being in the Catholic Novels of Graham Greene, Sigrid Undset and Georges Bernanos

J.C. Whitehouse

Book cover Catholicism has traditionally embraced both a clearly delineated belief in God and an unique view of human nature. Over the last half century, the traditonal Catholic concept of man as a creature in an individual relationship with his Creator ("vertical man") has been challenged by many dissatisfied theologians and writers. For many people today, even within the Catholic Church, man is now defined predominantly by a nexus of social relationships. He has become "horizontal man", obsessed with himself and distant from God.

In reply to this prevailing ideology, Whitehouse provides detailed interpretations of the human being in the works of three major twentieth-century Catholic novelists: Grahame Greene, Sigrid Undset and Georges Bernanos. His interpretations suggest a fruitful alternative and antidote to the dissent that is now so prevalent in the Church, and offer a richer view of man and his potential.

Dr. Whitehouse is Reader in Comparative Literature in the University of Bradford.

Add to shopping basket

Vertical Man, by J.C. Whitehouse.
227 pages, paperback. ISBN 1 901157 01 6.
£8.95 ; $24.95 in the U.S.A.
Published by The Saint Austin Press.
Click here to find out how to order from your local supplier.

The Catholicism of Shakespeare's Plays - Peter Milward SJ
The Simplicity of the West - Peter Milward SJ
Shakespeare's Apocalypse - Peter Milward SJ

Saint Austin Press Home Page


This page last updated 18 March 2003