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Growth of the Soil Paperback – November 18, 2010

4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars 575 ratings

A grand, sweeping saga of sacrifice and struggle, this epic tale recaptures the world of Norwegian homesteaders at the turn of the twentieth century. Isak and Inger, an idealistic young couple, reject modern society to raise their family on a back country farm. Isak's embrace of outdoor life reflects author Knut Hamsun's attitude of rugged individualism and his back-to-nature philosophy. Rich in symbolism, this moving tale of peasant life and the search for spiritual fulfillment in nature continues to resonate with modern readers. 
First published in Norwegian in 1917,
Growth of the Soil created an international sensation and led to the author's 1920 Nobel Prize in Literature. The New Yorker noted that "the list of those who loved [Hamsun's] sly, anarchic voice is long," naming Ernest Hemingway, Hermann Hesse, and André Gide as fans. "I am not usually lavish with my praise," remarked H. G. Wells, "but indeed the book impresses me as among the very greatest novels I have ever read."

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Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Dover Publications (November 18, 2010)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 368 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0486476006
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0486476001
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 12 ounces
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 5 x 0.75 x 8 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars 575 ratings

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Knut Hamsun
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Customer reviews

4.5 out of 5 stars
575 global ratings

Customers say

Customers find the storyline engaging and well-told. They also appreciate the lovely writing and thought-provoking plot. Readers describe the characters as real, developed, and evolving as the environment.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

16 customers mention "Storyline"16 positive0 negative

Customers find the storyline engaging, intelligent, and filled to the brim with life. They also say it's a great read of pioneer days and the relationship between man and nature. Readers also mention that it'd be a good representation of the hard life that people of the land had.

"...Hamsun is a crafty and thoughtful storyteller. I've also read his book 'Hunger' which is extraordinary and worth reading...." Read more

"...The translator gives us a lovely paean to the story: “The story is epic in its magnitude, in its calm, steady progress and unhurrying rhythm, in..." Read more

"...It's a beautiful novel, one of the most quietly moving novels I've ever read, written with a direct and spare style and full of incredible insight..." Read more

"...It's a very good representation of the hard life that people of the land had and the harsh realities of life before our modern technology changed..." Read more

13 customers mention "Writing quality"10 positive3 negative

Customers like the writing quality of the book. They also say that it's lovely, but it makes for a great deal of repetition.

"...And you should love his work it's some of the best written material around." Read more

"...That is lovely writing, but it also makes for a great deal of repetition and not much movement. Stolid...." Read more

"...novel, one of the most quietly moving novels I've ever read, written with a direct and spare style and full of incredible insight into humanity...." Read more

"...Hamsun is an amazing Norwegian writer. One does well to read his other works to fully appreciate his skill...." Read more

10 customers mention "Thought-provoking"10 positive0 negative

Customers find the book thought-provoking, saying it gives them insight into the mind of a Nazi. They also describe the book as calming, interesting, and pragmatic. Readers also mention that the development of the argument is complex and persuasive.

"...lovely paean to the story: “The story is epic in its magnitude, in its calm, steady progress and unhurrying rhythm, in its vast and intimate..." Read more

"...ever read, written with a direct and spare style and full of incredible insight into humanity...." Read more

"...His development of the argument is complex and persuasive...." Read more

"This novel gives a clear view of the lives of people in the undeveloped hinterlands of Norway...." Read more

7 customers mention "Characters"7 positive0 negative

Customers find the characters in the book real and developed. They also say they evolve as did the environment.

"...The story line, the writing style, the characters are stolid: slow-moving but substantial in their depth...." Read more

"...in pristine forests, this is a monumental work that uses a wide range of characters to explore the power and vulnerability of men who "work the land...." Read more

"...His character development is central but maybe difficult to follow for one not immersed at childhood with people from northern Scandinavia...." Read more

"...Characters were real and developed and evolved as did the environment. Gave me a good background for other reading prior to traveling to Norway...." Read more

3 customers mention "Pacing"3 positive0 negative

Customers find the pacing of the book slow but steady, mirroring the growth of the tilled land. They also appreciate the calm, steady progress and unhurried rhythm.

"...With a slow but steady pace, mirroring the growth of the tilled land, Hamsun introduces a panoply of characters from the Lutheran villages nearby as..." Read more

"...to the story: “The story is epic in its magnitude, in its calm, steady progress and unhurrying rhythm, in its vast and intimate humanity...." Read more

"...Like other reviewers, I found the work slow yet comforting, just like planting little seeds in black loam and watching them sprout and grow...." Read more

Quality is not correctly advertised
1 out of 5 stars
Quality is not correctly advertised
This book was advertised as “very good condition.” It is not in very good condition as you see by the pictures. The book binding is in terrible condition. I will be returning because it was not advertised correctly.
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Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on August 17, 2015
This book is an amazing testament to the way things used (ought..?) to be. In this mythical world Hamsun has created a lone man comes to wild land with a PURPOSE. His purpose is to cultivate and build and inhabit and 'grow' the land into something human, something sculpted, something meaningful.

Some people still live this purposeful existence, or try to, in places very remote (there are few left), such as Northern and Western Alaska and Siberia. It's a hard life but also a wonderful one. Few people get to experience it in our modern world. Can you imagine leaving the comforts of your city, suburban, or even semi-country life, and moving out into the middle of the wilderness on your own, constructing your own dwelling, growing crops, and raising livestock? Not for the feint of heart.

No one wants to do this kind of thing anymore and it's sad. This is a very powerful way to stay connected to the land and the inhabitants of the land. Hamsun does a wonderful job of illustrating this way of life and it's encroachment by more and more humans as time goes on. Most of the people in the novel don't get corrupted by the influence of the encroaching civilization except one of the main character's sons who goes very astray in a sad (and at times depressing) strain of the story...but he represents all (or many/maybe most) of us.

Hamsun is a crafty and thoughtful storyteller. I've also read his book 'Hunger' which is extraordinary and worth reading. Don't be put off by his Nazi sympathies. An artists prejudices and other personality traits/quirks or what have you, should not be confused in most cases with the art they create. You can dislike Hamsun the person and love his work. And you should love his work it's some of the best written material around.
4 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on July 26, 2023
It’s hard to understand different types of human consciousness. If it was easy we’d all be experts in Hegel.

But it’s undeniable that consciousness has changed as society has become more literate and technological and governments have become more free.

While it’s possible to access some of the earliest civilizations’ kinds of consciousness—one need only, for example, read the Hebrew Bible—Growth of the Soil is at its finest when it portrays what life was like for a farmer and his wife settling untilled land in the far northern part of Norway during the late nineteenth century.

Knut Hamsun actually thought that the solution to the problems of the twentieth century was a return to this way of life but that lack of foresight doesn’t diminish from the power of the novel. As it progresses, the nineteenth century catches up with the farmer and one sees the contrast between modern urban life and the more staid ways of the country.

To put its themes into words would, unfortunately, be to engage in a number of cliches. But I can guarantee that any reader will come away with a new appreciation for what the first settlers were like—their manners, customs and ways of thinking.

I don’t mean to suggest this is an exercise in cultural anthropology. With a slow but steady pace, mirroring the growth of the tilled land, Hamsun introduces a panoply of characters from the Lutheran villages nearby as well as fellow farmers in the Arctic Circle’s wilderness. And these characters have adventures and dilemmas ranging from the tragic to the comical. You couldn’t really even describe a way of life without the necessary drama of human living.

But it’s perennial interests comes, not from a great sense of the landscape—which actually is barely described, not from the story arcs and plot twists—though there are many, but from the insight into the manner in which almost all human beings used to live and which turned out to be on the point of almost vanishing (at least in Europe). Because of this unique perspective, I would argue that Growth of the Soil is almost a must read to fellow explorers of the human condition.
3 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on February 14, 2021
Growth of the soil Knut Hamsun (Pedersen)

The translator gives us a lovely paean to the story: “The story is epic in its magnitude, in its calm, steady progress and unhurrying rhythm, in its vast and intimate humanity. The author looks upon his characters with a great, all-tolerant” eye.

And the translator is right about the unhurrying rhythm – it’s a 200-page story told in 350 pages. The story line, the writing style, the characters are stolid: slow-moving but substantial in their depth. In fact, the slow, rhythmic movement of the prose is part of the attractiveness of the writing—the unchanging world of agriculture and of Isak himself: “Look! the tiny grains that are to take life and grow, shoot up into ears, and give more corn again; so it is throughout all the earth where corn is sown. Palestine, America, the valleys of Norway itself—a great wide world, and here is Isak, a tiny speck in the midst of it all, a sower. Little showers of corn flung out fanwise from his hand; a kindly clouded sky, with a promise of the faintest little misty rain.”

Part of the slowness is that Hamsun is writing from the point of view of a narrator who rarely sees into his characters. The most conversation we get out of Isak is the occasional “Ha.” As a Minnesotan, I understand this, since we have a lot of Norwegians in our population. We look to the Germans in the southern half of the state for humor and laissez-faire insouciance.

Usually, stories have some sort of character arc that animate their plots and draw the reader along. This one has an interesting twist, which I guess one might call the environment arc. The farm, to some degree the people involved with it change and grow, but Isak is a rock-solid constant, “A tiller of the ground, body and soul; a worker on the land without respite. A ghost risen out of the past to point the future, a man from the earliest days of cultivation, a settler in the wilds, nine hundred years old, and, withal, a man of the day.” That is lovely writing, but it also makes for a great deal of repetition and not much movement. Stolid.

It was interesting to read, marvelous in some parts, soporific in others.
15 people found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

Translate all reviews to English
Amazon Customer
1.0 out of 5 stars Awful transation
Reviewed in the Netherlands on March 26, 2024
The awful translation pretending to be country side Americans is very distracting. The novel having so many characters also doesn't help. This particular edition with black cover says it's printed by amazon with no mention of translator as well. I recommend trying other editions or just. learning norwegian and getting the original
Vinay Tiwari
5.0 out of 5 stars Canonical work of austere beauty
Reviewed in India on March 11, 2021
Published in 1917 and instantly recognized as a masterpiece 'Growth of the Soil' marked the high point of Knut Hamsun's literary career.
The plot of the novel is at once simple, sublime, elemental and transcendental, for it is the story of creation. A man, Isak, comes to an uninhabited part of Norway. In this cold, forbidding place he makes his covenant with the land. He is joined by Inger: his wife, partner and co-creator. Isak has a visceral bond with the earth and through sheer physical strength and will he creates a home, a homestead and in time a community of fellow settlers who come in his wake. Through the viscissitudes of life, it's flourishes and disappointments Isak never breaks his covenant. He tends to the earth, his animals and they, unfailingly, tend to him. For Isak the soil is not a means to get food or clothing, his relationship with the soil is primordial. He farms because he must, not only because he needs. The covenant between man and earth is ancient, hallowed, mystical and Isak sustains it.

The novel is pastoral and goes into  considerable detail about the life on a farm. Hamsun's experience working as a
farm hand lends authenticity while his consummate skill makes a three page description of cowshed building
a gripping read.

The novel is didactic in tone, without being overbearing or preachy. It covers multiple themes, as is wont, in a story of biblical aspirations.  The primary theme is the relation of man and nature. Isak is a simple man, a few passage of Psalms and stories from the Bible being the sum total of his formal education. He is a man of few words, fewer emotions and of simple certainties. He works the earth and the earth gives him all he needs. Sometimes the weather is inclement but Isak is judicious and the Lord rewards him with a bumper harvest the next year. He has faith, patience, strength, a companion: Inger, and that is enough.

For people like me, who live in a city but are only one generation removed from a pastoral life,reading the book is to face a sense of loss, of a bond having been irrevocably severed. It brings to mind this passage from VS Naipaul's India : A Wounded Civilization
"... the custom was possible only with an open fireplace. To have to give up the custom was to abjure a link with the earth and the antiquity of earth, of the beginning of things. ... So that awe in the presence of the earth and the universe was something to be rediscovered later, by other means"

The corrupting influence of the City is the other major theme of the novel. This does seem overdone at times. Inger is arrested for infanticide and spends five years in prison. The prison is progressive and they teach her sewing, provide education and perform surgery on her harelip yet the affectations of City, it's pretensions and superfluous nature leave a mark on Inger. Everyone who comes from the city or spends time there is worse for it. From Isak's son Eleseus (a rather overdone caricature of Hamsun himself), his neighbour Brede and even his benefactor Giessler all show flaws of character. The City is a necessary evil, it is parasitic upon the village. This view of the City isnt terribly original or nuanced and is the one weak point of the book.

The sacred union of man and wife, the strength of this bond is a recurring theme. Isak has Inger and she shares his world, nurtures it. She gives him a family, a purpose and children. Aksel, a later settler as hardworking as Isak, lacks a wife and his farm never rises above providing for bare necessities. Aksel looks at a wife in terms of a utilitarian transaction of recruiting a co-worker while Isak's union with Inger has a sense of providence. As far as love stories go it is hard to top Hamsun's narration: 

"They entered the hut, ate of her food and drank his goat milk; then they made coffee. They lingered pleasantly over their coffee before going to bed. At night he lay feeling greedy for her and took her.
In the morning she didn't leave, nor did she leave the rest of the day, but made herself useful, milked the goats and scrubbed the pots with fine sand. She never left. Inger was her name, Isak his. "

Another aspect of the novel which, for an Indian reader, would stand out is the supportive role of the State and its bureaucracy. Geissler, the sheriff, is supportive of Isak and helps him get a formal title to the land he has worked on, a fair price for the copper that is discovered in Isak's land. Geissler, a worldly wise man, knows that Isak, and people like him, are the true engines of civilization. Inger, in prison, recieves education, skills of a seamstress and a sense of self worth. This benign, welfare state is not without its flaws. As the remit of the State grows it invades the private and communal space of the settlers. The simple Christian morality of Psalms, embodied by Isak and Aksel, comes in conflict with the progressive ideas of the new bureaucracy. Hamsun shows the inevitable conflict and the hollowness of liberal ideas of progress. Deracinated officials, who succeed Geissler, try to impose liberal, enlightenment values onto an ancient tradition. Hamsun evokes this in the differential treatment of Inger and Barbro(the daughter of one of Isak's neighbor) at the hands of the State for the crime of infanticide. Inger is treated with sympathy, her crime was one of necessity, her remorse genuine but the scales of justice have to be balanced and she serves 5 years in prison, the minimum possible and is treated well. Barbro commits her crime a few years later, she does it to escape marriage, responsibility, never confesses and feels not a sliver of guilt. Yet the wife of the new sheriff, the paradigm of liberal progress, holds up Barbro as the emblematic victim and frames the murder of an infant as an act of freedom. Barbro is found not guilty. The scales have come unstuck.

At the end of the novel we find Isak, still at work even as his prodigal strength begins to desert him with age. Inger is there, by his side and his younger son Sivert, a chip off the old block. They are happy, Isak knows the worth of what he has done. He has created a city; he was the first man, from his sweat and blood life has sprung forth. Hamsun encapsulates the meaning of his novel in this elegant passage
"The settlers didn't make themselves suffer on account of goodies they hadn't got: art, newspapers, luxuries, politics were worth exactly as much as people were willing to pay for them, no more; the growth of the soil, on the other hand, had to be procured at any cost. It was the origin of all things, the only source."

The book, a literary sensation, has had an eventful afterlife. Hamsun's support for Nazism has bedevilled his ouvre and no other book has suffered more than Growth of the Soil. After all it was the book Goebbels, the Nazi propaganda minister, gave to German soldiers as they marched to conquer Europe. Heidegger, the greatest philosopher of the 20th century, and a Nazi supporter recommended in 1926 that Hannah Arendt (his student and sometime lover) read Hamsun. I found this extremely interesting. In 1926 no one would have accused Heidegger or Hamsun of being proto Nazis / Fascists. Yet here we have a meeting of minds, Heidegger's attraction to Hamsun prefigures the dark turn both were about to take. Study of intellectual history is peppered with such Aha! moments.

Isak is the Ubermensch of Maistre. 'Growth of the Soil' is a canonical work in every sense of the word. Read it we must, life itself depends on it.
Customer image
Vinay Tiwari
5.0 out of 5 stars Canonical work of austere beauty
Reviewed in India on March 11, 2021
Published in 1917 and instantly recognized as a masterpiece 'Growth of the Soil' marked the high point of Knut Hamsun's literary career.
The plot of the novel is at once simple, sublime, elemental and transcendental, for it is the story of creation. A man, Isak, comes to an uninhabited part of Norway. In this cold, forbidding place he makes his covenant with the land. He is joined by Inger: his wife, partner and co-creator. Isak has a visceral bond with the earth and through sheer physical strength and will he creates a home, a homestead and in time a community of fellow settlers who come in his wake. Through the viscissitudes of life, it's flourishes and disappointments Isak never breaks his covenant. He tends to the earth, his animals and they, unfailingly, tend to him. For Isak the soil is not a means to get food or clothing, his relationship with the soil is primordial. He farms because he must, not only because he needs. The covenant between man and earth is ancient, hallowed, mystical and Isak sustains it.

The novel is pastoral and goes into  considerable detail about the life on a farm. Hamsun's experience working as a
farm hand lends authenticity while his consummate skill makes a three page description of cowshed building
a gripping read.

The novel is didactic in tone, without being overbearing or preachy. It covers multiple themes, as is wont, in a story of biblical aspirations.  The primary theme is the relation of man and nature. Isak is a simple man, a few passage of Psalms and stories from the Bible being the sum total of his formal education. He is a man of few words, fewer emotions and of simple certainties. He works the earth and the earth gives him all he needs. Sometimes the weather is inclement but Isak is judicious and the Lord rewards him with a bumper harvest the next year. He has faith, patience, strength, a companion: Inger, and that is enough.

For people like me, who live in a city but are only one generation removed from a pastoral life,reading the book is to face a sense of loss, of a bond having been irrevocably severed. It brings to mind this passage from VS Naipaul's India : A Wounded Civilization
"... the custom was possible only with an open fireplace. To have to give up the custom was to abjure a link with the earth and the antiquity of earth, of the beginning of things. ... So that awe in the presence of the earth and the universe was something to be rediscovered later, by other means"

The corrupting influence of the City is the other major theme of the novel. This does seem overdone at times. Inger is arrested for infanticide and spends five years in prison. The prison is progressive and they teach her sewing, provide education and perform surgery on her harelip yet the affectations of City, it's pretensions and superfluous nature leave a mark on Inger. Everyone who comes from the city or spends time there is worse for it. From Isak's son Eleseus (a rather overdone caricature of Hamsun himself), his neighbour Brede and even his benefactor Giessler all show flaws of character. The City is a necessary evil, it is parasitic upon the village. This view of the City isnt terribly original or nuanced and is the one weak point of the book.

The sacred union of man and wife, the strength of this bond is a recurring theme. Isak has Inger and she shares his world, nurtures it. She gives him a family, a purpose and children. Aksel, a later settler as hardworking as Isak, lacks a wife and his farm never rises above providing for bare necessities. Aksel looks at a wife in terms of a utilitarian transaction of recruiting a co-worker while Isak's union with Inger has a sense of providence. As far as love stories go it is hard to top Hamsun's narration: 

"They entered the hut, ate of her food and drank his goat milk; then they made coffee. They lingered pleasantly over their coffee before going to bed. At night he lay feeling greedy for her and took her.
In the morning she didn't leave, nor did she leave the rest of the day, but made herself useful, milked the goats and scrubbed the pots with fine sand. She never left. Inger was her name, Isak his. "

Another aspect of the novel which, for an Indian reader, would stand out is the supportive role of the State and its bureaucracy. Geissler, the sheriff, is supportive of Isak and helps him get a formal title to the land he has worked on, a fair price for the copper that is discovered in Isak's land. Geissler, a worldly wise man, knows that Isak, and people like him, are the true engines of civilization. Inger, in prison, recieves education, skills of a seamstress and a sense of self worth. This benign, welfare state is not without its flaws. As the remit of the State grows it invades the private and communal space of the settlers. The simple Christian morality of Psalms, embodied by Isak and Aksel, comes in conflict with the progressive ideas of the new bureaucracy. Hamsun shows the inevitable conflict and the hollowness of liberal ideas of progress. Deracinated officials, who succeed Geissler, try to impose liberal, enlightenment values onto an ancient tradition. Hamsun evokes this in the differential treatment of Inger and Barbro(the daughter of one of Isak's neighbor) at the hands of the State for the crime of infanticide. Inger is treated with sympathy, her crime was one of necessity, her remorse genuine but the scales of justice have to be balanced and she serves 5 years in prison, the minimum possible and is treated well. Barbro commits her crime a few years later, she does it to escape marriage, responsibility, never confesses and feels not a sliver of guilt. Yet the wife of the new sheriff, the paradigm of liberal progress, holds up Barbro as the emblematic victim and frames the murder of an infant as an act of freedom. Barbro is found not guilty. The scales have come unstuck.

At the end of the novel we find Isak, still at work even as his prodigal strength begins to desert him with age. Inger is there, by his side and his younger son Sivert, a chip off the old block. They are happy, Isak knows the worth of what he has done. He has created a city; he was the first man, from his sweat and blood life has sprung forth. Hamsun encapsulates the meaning of his novel in this elegant passage
"The settlers didn't make themselves suffer on account of goodies they hadn't got: art, newspapers, luxuries, politics were worth exactly as much as people were willing to pay for them, no more; the growth of the soil, on the other hand, had to be procured at any cost. It was the origin of all things, the only source."

The book, a literary sensation, has had an eventful afterlife. Hamsun's support for Nazism has bedevilled his ouvre and no other book has suffered more than Growth of the Soil. After all it was the book Goebbels, the Nazi propaganda minister, gave to German soldiers as they marched to conquer Europe. Heidegger, the greatest philosopher of the 20th century, and a Nazi supporter recommended in 1926 that Hannah Arendt (his student and sometime lover) read Hamsun. I found this extremely interesting. In 1926 no one would have accused Heidegger or Hamsun of being proto Nazis / Fascists. Yet here we have a meeting of minds, Heidegger's attraction to Hamsun prefigures the dark turn both were about to take. Study of intellectual history is peppered with such Aha! moments.

Isak is the Ubermensch of Maistre. 'Growth of the Soil' is a canonical work in every sense of the word. Read it we must, life itself depends on it.
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José Macaya
5.0 out of 5 stars Estupendo libro
Reviewed in Spain on July 5, 2019
Bien escrito y con trasfondo
Anton Maghetiu
5.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars
Reviewed in Canada on November 4, 2016
excellent book and seller
a23
5.0 out of 5 stars Rich and human
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on December 29, 2009
I haven't read any Hamsun before - was intrigued by an article in the paper about his writing.
Found this a most satisfying and fulfilling read. The characterization is perhaps the strongest feature - here are men and women hewn out of living rock; they possess a timeless truth. We see the effects of life experience, fortune and disappointment impact on each. There is tension between the basics of life (working hard on the land to fill your belly/soul) and the effects of "civilization" (detachment from the land) - my sense was that for every "advancement" Isak encountered to make life easier or profit greater - for example the arrival of the mowing machines- there was a diminishing of his true nature.
The novel reads like it has been grafted onto something far older and deeper in the reader's psyche - Norse myth didn't seem far away - I kept thinking of the enigmatic Geissler character, who can make or break the lives of others at a whim, as a Trickster type being, popping up at times of his choosing. There's a strong moral component too, but even this is mutable - compare the treatment of infanticide as the years pass between Inger and Barbro's experiences. There's the sense of life being a cycle - both of the individual characters and of wider society.
Thought provoking, well worth a read.
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