![]() ![]() The secret service professionals of le Carré’s Circus as ‘the Nursery’, is a public school for spies. Sarratt, an old country house in the English home counties, known among Finally the Introduction offers a chapter-by-chapter summary of this volume. ![]() Previous critical approaches are briefly surveyed,Īfter which this study’s methodology is discussed, a cultural materialism that exposes the submerged ideology of leĬarré’s novels. Immersed in patrician nostalgia and postimperial melancholia. Le Carré’s work is seen to uphold a conservative nationalism, Society is – with complications – upheld. Presentation of the nation, in which the Britain’s establishment-dominated, class-stratified The anti-Communism of le Carré’s depiction of the enemy second, le Carré’sĮquivocal treatment of the state – which is decried but upheld and third, the This volume’s three themes are outlined: first, ![]() Of the Cold War in the popular imagination. The Introduction discusses the dissemination impact Īnd influence of le Carré’s work, claiming it both channelled Cold-War currents and helped fix particular conceptions ![]()
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