A Passage to India
Technical:
- ID: 38
- Added: 2025-08-15
- Updated: 2025-09-03
- ISBN: 9791041800179
- Publisher: BoD - Books on Demand
- Published: 2023-01-15
- Reviews: 6
The setting of A Passage to India is the British Raj, at a time of racial tension heightened by the burgeoning Indian independence movement. Adela Quested, a young British subject, is visiting India to decide whether to marry a suitor who works there as a city magistrate. During her visit, a local physician, Aziz, is accused of assaulting her. His trial brings tensions between the British rulers and their Indian subjects to a head. The novel is a complex exploration of colonialism, written at a time when the popular portrayal of the Indian continent was of mystery and savagery. Forster humanized the Indian people for his at-home British audience, highlighting the damage that colonialism caused not just to interpersonal relationships, but to society at large. On the other hand, some modern scholars view the failure of the human relationships in the book as suggesting a fundamental “otherness” between the two cultures: a gulf across which the disparate cultures can only see each other’s shadows. In any case, the novel generated—and continues to generate—an abundant amount of critical analysis. A Passage to India is the last novel Forster published in his lifetime, and it frequently appears in “best-of” lists of literature: The Modern Library selected it as one of its 100 great works of the 20th century, Time magazine included it in its “All Time 100 Novels” list, and it won the 1924 James Tait Black Memorial Prize for fiction.
Reviews
Pull quotes
- It's perfect for Post-Colonial study.
- Forster's prose is beautiful and the way he writes about India make it an actual character.
- A masterful portrait of a society in the grip of imperialism.
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- The doctor walks back to the club with her, although as an Indian, he himself cannot be admitted.
- The bridge party is a miserable affair.
- An awkward tension prevails.
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- The sublime, emotionally connected novels of E M Forster are an ideal fit for any generation.
- Many consider A Passage to India a masterpiece.
- The novel compellingly depicts the fate of individuals caught in the great political and cultural turmoil of imperialism.
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- A Passage To India subsequently explores how Adela and Aziz both suffer their own individuals trails.
- So too Fielding, who makes himself an important character in the emotional and cultural dynamics of the story.
- The novel is a wonderful exploration of British-Indian relationships during colonial rule.
Pull quotes
- Set in British India in the 1920s, the story examines the clash of races and cultures.
- When a young English lady, Miss Quested, accuses an Indian man Dr. Aziz ...
- The novel delves deeply into issues of friendship and betrayal amid colonial tensions.
Pull quotes
- It is a good book, but sadly not approaching A Room With A View or Where Angels Fear To Tread.