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Sunday, June 2, 2019

An Inward Collapse of the Human Perspective in Forsters A Passage to I

An Inward Collapse of the Human Perspective in Forsters A Passage to India The reverberation of sound in the form of an reduplicate is threaded throughout E.M. Forsters A Passage to India, and the link between the echo and the hollowness of the human spirit is depicted in the text. The echo is not hear in the beginning of the text when the English newcomers, Mrs. Moore and Ms. Quested, arrive in India it is more clearly heard as their relationship with India gains complexity. The influence of the colonisers and the colonized on unmatchable another is inevitable however, the usual assumption is that the colonists are the most successful in imposing their values and ideologies on the individuals whom they view as the natives. In an first appearance to a text depicting a portrait of the colonizer and the colonized, Jean-Paul Sartre states that in attempting to dehumanize colonized individuals, the colonist becomes dehumanized himself. A relentless reciprocity binds the colonizer to the colonized-his product becomes his fate (Sartre xxviii). While Forsters text possesses numerous instances of the English losing a humanistic perspective as they place the Indians in a submissive part and treat them as subjects, it can be argued that Sartres observation of the dynamic existing between the colonizer and the colonized is somewhat manipulated in Forsters text-instead of being dehumanized from their painting to the colonized, the colonizers gain greater insight into the essence of humanity. The English characters in the text are embraced by the mystery and spirituality of the Orient, which is the focus of their imperialism. As a result, the English join their Indian counterparts in looking inward and outward to discover that the void a... ...rain and snows O day and night, passage to you -Walt Whitman Works Cited Crews, Frederick C. E.M. Forster The Perils of Humanism. New Jersey Princeton University Press, 1962. Forster, E.M. A Passage to India. San Diego H arcourt Brace & Company, 1984 Parry, Benita. A Passage to More than India. Ed. Malcolm Bradbury. Forster A Collection of Critical Essays. New Jersey Prentice-Hall, Inc., 1966. Rosecrance, Barbara. Forsters Narrative Vision. Ithaca Cornell University Press, 1982. Sartre, Jean-Paul. Introduction. The Colonizer and the Colonized. By Albert Memmi. New York hunting watch Press, 1965. xxi-xxix. Stone, Wilfred. The Cave and the Mountain A Study of E.M. Forster. London Oxford University Press, 1966. Thomson, George H. The Fiction of E.M. Forster. Detroit Wayne State University press, 1967.

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