Introduction
"East is east and West is west, and never the twain shall meet." The British poet Rudyard Kipling who was born in India in 1865 and lived there for several yea...
A Passage to India by Edward Morgan Forster is truly one of the great books of it's time. Written in an era when the world was more romantic, yet substantially less civil to...
A Passage to India - Hindu Influence
Several different literary elements work in tandem to produce the magic seen in E. M. Forster's A Passage to India. Because this nove...
'Hinduism is the solution'
'The Marabar has been wiped out' Discuss
The Marabar caves catalyse much of the unrest in the middle section of the novel. The geological str...
A Passage to India entails various social criticisms and political matters that are among the human race. The setting of the story takes place in India...
E.M. Forster's A Passage to India concerns the relations between the English and the native population of India during the colonial period in which Britain ruled India. The...
Quote: "India a nation! What an apotheosis! Last comer to the drab nineteenth-century sisterhood! Waddling in at this hour of the world to take her seat! She, whose only peer...
In this excerpt from the novel A Passage to India, the author explores several themes through the use of figurative language, linguistic features, and lit...
E.M. Forster's "A Passage to India" deals directly with the position of Britain as the ruler of India and its affect on personal relationships. One of these relationships is b...
The clash of cultures and races in "A Passage to India"
A Passage to India, published in 1924, was E. M. Forster's first novel in fourteen years, and the last novel he w...
Science is moving at such a rapid speed these days, between cloning, gene
therapy, miracle drugs, exotic therapies, etc. One of the most significant breakthroughs...
From Elementary physics, we know that, when an object is subjected to a constant acceleration a, the relationship between distance d and time t is given by d = ½at2. Suppose...
Jane Eyre, A passage to India, and The Tempest all hold within their covers' stories of women or girls who knowingly and unknowingly affected the lives of men they were invol...
The recurring animal motifs in A Passage To India suggest a harmonious life existing outside of the contrasting state of humanity. While tensions escalate among the English an...
Upon a most rudimentary evaluation, A Passage to India is simply a story, a tale of two countries through which we follow a handful of central characters. As readers, we watc...
E.M. Forster’s novel, A Passage to India, spirals into the realm of the meta-physical and philosophical. “Philosophy studies the fundamental nature of existence, of man, a...
On a modern-day passage to India, Thomas L. Friedman, the foreign affairs columnist for the New York Times, found himself chatting in Bangalore with a young, slight, mustachio...
At the heart of A Passage to India is the clash of cultures. The British represent the West and the Indians represent the East. There has always been a clash between these two...
There are many salient themes in E.M. Forster's The Passage to India, which portray the conflict between the English and the Indians during the British Raj of Imperialist Brit...