E.M Forster's A Passage To India
E.M Forster's A Passage To India
E.M Forster's A Passage To India
Forster’s father, an architect, died when the son was a baby, and he was
brought up by his mother and paternal aunts. The difference between the
two families, his father’s being strongly evangelical with a high sense
of moral responsibility, his mother’s more feckless and generous-
minded, gave him an enduring insight into the nature of domestic
tensions, while his education as a dayboy (day student) at Tonbridge
School, Kent, was responsible for many of his later criticisms of the
English public school (private) system. At King’s College, Cambridge,
he enjoyed a sense of liberation. For the first time he was free to follow
his own intellectual inclinations; and he gained a sense of the uniqueness
of the individual, of the healthiness of moderate skepticism, and of the
importance of Mediterranean civilization as a counterbalance to the
more straitlaced attitudes of northern European countries.
The story revolves around four characters: Dr. Aziz, his British friend
Mr. Cyril Fielding, Mrs. Moore, and Miss Adela Quested. During a trip
to the fictitious Marabar Caves (modeled on the Barabar Caves of
Bihar), Adela thinks she finds herself alone with Dr. Aziz in one of the
caves (when in fact he is in an entirely different cave), and subsequently
panics and flees; it is assumed that Dr. Aziz has attempted to assault her.
Aziz's trial, and its run-up and aftermath, bring to a boil the common
racial tensions and prejudices between Indians and the British who rule
India.
Reason Behind A Passage To India:
Looking at E.M. Forster’s novels, readers can clearly see that his life and
the world around him had a profound impact on where he drew
inspiration from for his writing. Forster’s novels are all marked by
analysis of society within the narrative. Whether the focus of this
commentary is love or colonization, much of the characters’ experiences
reflect insight that Forster gained in his own life. He used his own
upbringing in a middle class family, education in a metropolitan city of
England, and travels abroad to bring validity to his story A Passage to
India. Forster’s life experiences were in fact the whole inspiration for
this story: he helped the war effort doing civilian war work in India for
three years and later visited India twice in 1912-1913 and 1921. After
these experiences Forster wrote A Passage to India as an “anti-war
novel” (“E.M. Forster,” Beer). He depicts the characters Adela Quested
and Mrs. Moore almost immediately having problems with the social
hierarchy upon arriving in India. The obvious differences between the
middle-class Englishwomen and their male counterparts and the Indian
hosts who serve as their guides quickly evolve into more deep-rooted
cultural tensions. Forster demonstrated how the English’s
misunderstanding of the Indian people and their customs contributed to
the burden that the natives felt by being subjected to British rule. For
example, when Dr. Aziz is in the outdoor mosque, he is surprised to find
Mrs. Moore there as well. At first he is startled and concerned because
the English people paid little attention to the holiness of the sanctuary.
However, Mrs. Moore explains that she understands the customs of such
a holy shrine and removes her shoes out of respect. Aziz is pleased; she
not only demonstrates consideration for his religious beliefs, she also
shows that she was genuinely interested—something he did not expect
from an Englishwoman. “You understand me, you know what others
feel. Oh, if others were like you!” (A Passage to India 23), Aziz
exclaimed to her. He finds he is able to connect with Mrs. Moore, and he
appreciates that. He does not feel like there were any cultural or class
barriers between them. However, only a few moments later that changes
as Mrs. Moore says she wishes she could invite him into the
Chandrapore Club as her guest. Aziz explained that it was an all-whites