A Passage to India (1924) is a novel by English author
E. M. Forster set against the backdrop of the British Raj and the Indian
independence movement in the 1920s. It was selected as one of the 100 great
works of English literature by the Modern Library and won the 1924 James Tait
Black Memorial Prize for fiction. Time magazine included the novel in its
"100 Best English-language Novels from 1923 to 2005. The novel is based on
Forster's experiences in India.
E.M. Forster wrote A Passage to India in 1924, the last
completed novel that he published during his lifetime. The novel differs from
Forster's other major works in its overt political content, as opposed to the
lighter tone and more subdued political subtext contained in works such as
Howards End and A Room With a View. The novel deals with the political
occupation of India by the British, a colonial domination that ended after the
publication of Forster's text and still during his lifetime.
The colonial occupation of India is significant in
terms of the background of the novel. Britain occupied an important place in
political affairs in India since 1760, but did not secure control over India
for nearly a century. In August of 1858, during a period of violent revolt
against Britain by the Indians, the British Parliament passed the Government of
India Act, transferring political power from the East India Company to the
crown. This established the bureaucratic colonial system in India headed by a
Council of India consisting initially of fifteen Britons. Although Parliament
and Queen Victoria maintained support for local princes, Victoria added the
title Empress of India to her regality. The typical attitude of Britons in
India was that they were undertaking the "white man's burden," as put
by Rudyard Kipling. This was a system of aloof, condescending sovereignty in
which the English bureaucracy did not associate with the persons they ruled,
and finds its expression in characters such as Ronny Heaslop and Mr. McBryde in
A Passage to India.
Indian nationalism began to foment around 1885 with the
first meeting of the Indian National Congress, and nationalism found expression
in the Muslim community as well around the beginning of the twentieth century.
Reforms in India's political system occurred with the victory of the Liberal
Party in 1906, culminating in the Indian Councils Act of 1909, but nationalism
continued to rise.
India took part in the first world war, assisting the
British with the assumption that this help would lead to political concessions,
but even with the promise after the war that Indians would play an increased
role in their own government, relations between the English and Indians did not
improve. After the war tension continued; in 1919 hundreds of Indians were
massacred at Amritsar's Jallianwala Bagh during a protest. It is around this
time that Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi became a preeminent force in Indian
politics, and it is also around this time that Forster would wrote A Passage to
India. More than twenty years later, after a long struggle, Parliament passed
the Indian Independence Act in 1947, ordering the separation of India and
Pakistan and granting both nations their sovereignty.
"Orientals" is an old racial term for anybody
not White/European. Because "Orientals" were considered passive and
unsophisticated, it was thought, by Europeans, they could not rule themselves.
The British Empire was really fashioned after this ideology. This would apply
to India and Forrester's Passage to India.
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