Colonial mentality in Graham Greene’s The Quiet American
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Central Department of English
Abstract
This dissertation which concentrates on a critical study of Graham Greene’s
The Quiet American, is an attempt to explore the presence of colonial mentality that
assumes the superb status of the whites over non-whites in term of race, civilization,
ethnicity. This paper basically focuses upon underlying psychic patterns, behaviors
and manners of the white protagonist and narrator named Thomas Fowler, who, as a
product of white cultural background, expresses his colonial attitudes by representing
everything non-white as ‘other’, inferior, ‘uncivilized’ and ‘marginal’. Fowler shows
his love and sympathy towards the non-European such as Phuong and Dominguez but
his love and sympathy remains till they serve him. Such Eurocentric and ethnocentric
and racist attitudes and biases are the sole products of colonial mentality shared by
Greene and externalized through the protagonist, Fowler, in The Quiet American.
