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Loading... A passage to Indiaby E. M. Forster
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. A very readable account of life in India under British rule in the early 20th century. The characters of Dr. Mohammed Aziz and Cyril Fielding are well explored, and the story is ultimately a tale of well-meaning people acting in a time of unrest while surrounded by the pressures of their native societies and the racial those societies carry. Forster deftly creates real characters who alternate between being trapped in the path their environment would choose for them and escaping it for moments of real connection. The dialog evokes the friction each person might experience while trying to relate to another; Aziz's Indian tendency to dance around a problem confounds Fielding, whose logical desire to resolve problems offends Aziz's subtlety. Forster's weakness is his betrayal of his own biases. The author paints as ideal Fielding's atheism and the need for colonial rule of India. Overall, this was a very interesting, readable, and compelling illustration of life in India near the end of the British Raj. The trial of Aziz, especially, holds the reader rapt and manages to defy expectations. Comments: Very interesting novel in which east meets west (albeit not very successfully) in British India at the turn of the century. Cultures, religions and personalities clash, characters, such as, Dr. Aziz, Cyril Fielding and Adela try to be people they are not and the reader anticipates what will happen to them after a fateful excursion to Marabar Caves. I usually check out a location I'm reading about on Google Earth and was a bit surprised to find that Forster's Maramar Caves are actually the Barabar Caves and I am puzzled as to why he changed the name. If anyone knows why......... Why I read it now: E. M. Forster is the LT author of the month and I just happened to have this one languishing on my book shelf. Recommended: highly, for readers who enjoy historical novels, cultural diversity and humanitarian issues. A Passage to India, published in 1924 is one of the best known works of E. M. Forster. It was published at a time when the Indian independence movement was at its height. The story of A Passage to India is set in the fictional Indian town of Chandrapore. Two women, Mrs. Moore, the mother of Ronny Heaslop, the British city magistrate of Chandrapore and Adela Quested come to visit India. Adela is supposed to marry Ronny but has some rather ambiguous feelings about him, settling in India and marriage in general. Adela at the same time has some vague intentions of learning about the real India and its people. In the course of her quest to find the real India Adela meets Mr. Fielding, the British headmaster of the small government-run college and Dr. Aziz, a young Muslim Indian Physician. An untoward incident during a trip to the Marabar Caves sours their newly found friendship, an incident which brings out the worst in both the British rulers and their local subjects. After I started to read this book I realized I had to be very careful. I had to read each and every sentence with great care lest I should miss some of the deeper meanings embedded in them. Most would say that this is a story of the racial tension that exists between the ruler and the subjects. It is about British colonization of India and the blatant and latent hatred and mistrust they had of their Indian subjects and vice versa. But I believe there is more to it than that. Sure, the setting of the story is India during the Colonial times but the story is more about isolation and the lack of understanding. Isolation that results from people refusing to understand that someone else may view the world in a different way. When people, afraid of learning new things, take refuge within feelings of distrust and hatred. This is the story of utter disconnection, not only between the British and the Indians, but between men and women and the older and the younger generation. One of the most interesting points of the story is the characters of Mrs. Moore and Adela. They are fascinatingly complex. Mrs. Moore is idolized by Dr. Aziz. But she never really does any real good to him. Adela never intends to hurt anyone. And yet she sets in motion events that will eventually change everyone’s lives forever. The friendship between Mr. Fielding and Dr. Aziz and its gradual disintegration is another important point of the story. They try and ultimately fail to cross the chasm between them that have been created by race and the ruler-subject relations. E. M. Forster’s writing is very good but definitely complex. He seems captivated by the Indian culture and landscape. He certainly describes it in great detail. E. M. Forster ultimately does not give us an answer to the question of what really happened in those caves. Did something really happen to Adela? Or was she just overwhelmed by the caves and hallucinated the whole thing? Why did the caves have such a curious effect on both Mrs. Moore and Adela? Was it merely culture shock and the unbearable heat or was it something more tangible? I’m still pondering. My first introduction to Forster... He has a gift for personifying places, and I think that's one of my favorite things about this novel... India becomes a protagonist in the tensions between the characters. It's fascinating. no reviews | add a review
Amazon.com Amazon.com Review (ISBN 0156711427, Paperback)What really happened in the Marabar caves? This is the mystery at the heart of E.M. Forster's 1924 novel, A Passage to India, the puzzle that sets in motion events highlighting an even larger question: Can an Englishman and an Indian be friends?"It is impossible here," an Indian character tells his friend, Dr. Aziz, early in the novel. "They come out intending to be gentlemen, and are told it will not do.... Why, I remember when Turton came out first. It was in another part of the Province. You fellows will not believe me, but I have driven with Turton in his carriage--Turton! Oh yes, we were once quite intimate. He has shown me his stamp collection.Written while England was still firmly in control of India, Forster's novel follows the fortunes of three English newcomers to India--Miss Adela Quested, Mrs. Moore, and Cyril Fielding--and the Indian, Dr. Aziz, with whom they cross destinies. The idea of true friendship between the races was a radical one in Forster's time, and he makes it abundantly clear that it was not one that either side welcomed. If Aziz's friend, Hamidullah, believed it impossible, the British representatives of the Raj were equally discouraging. "Why, the kindest thing one can do to a native is to let him die," said Mrs. Callendar.Despite their countrymen's disapproval, Miss Quested, Mrs. Moore, and Mr. Fielding are all eager to meet Indians, and in Dr. Aziz they find a perfect companion: educated, westernized, and open-minded. Slowly, the friendships ripen, especially between Aziz and Fielding. Having created the possibility of esteem based on trust and mutual affection, Forster then subjects it to the crucible of racial hatred: during a visit to the famed Marabar caves, Miss Quested accuses Dr. Aziz of sexually assaulting her, then later recants during the frenzied trial that follows. Under such circumstances, affection proves to be a very fragile commodity indeed. Arguably Forster's greatest novel, A Passage to India limns a troubling portrait of colonialism at its worst, and is remarkable for the complexity of its characters. Here the personal becomes the political and in the breach between Aziz and his English "friends," Forster foreshadows the eventual end of the Raj. --Alix Wilber (retrieved from Amazon Tue, 05 Jan 2010 13:31:48 -0500) The first test round has been closed. Visit the Open Shelves Classification group for details. |
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I liked how Forster divided the book into three parts. He named them "Mosque, Caves, and Temple." In my head, I referred to them as "Cold, Hot, and Rain," because the mood of India depends so much on the varied weather patterns. As the intolerant magistrate of Chandrapore says to his mother Mrs. Moore, a visitor with a rare understanding of the Indian people, "There's nothing in India but the weather...it's the Alpha and Omega of the whole affair."
It is only at the end during the rainy season that a feeling of hope enters the story. All the suspicions and misunderstandings fade into the background as the long estrangement of Aziz and Fielding is reconciled and we realize that even the British control of India with no regard for the Indians themselves will not last forever. I'll be looking for more books on this fascinating period of history. (