From the feminist point of view, it is significant that out of all the twenty-five novels, from The Man Within (1929) to The Captain and Enemy (1988) written by Graham Greene none is endowed with a memorable female protagonist. Greeneland assiduously denies women their rightful place in the socio-economic spheres so that they are excluded from the centers of power and authority. Greene, as a man and as a writer, has never fought shy of taking on the ...