¶ … Passage to India
The E.M. Forster book A Passage to India shows the value of human relationships across cultural and physical boundaries, but also addresses the significance of how the majority of individuals find that they do not really want to "befriend" those who are different from them, because globalization has not been enough to provide actual equality.
The book has key components that set the stage for analyzing it in the context of globalization. The main component that provides this is the way those who are different are viewed. While they are seen to be worthless by some, the main characters of the novel want to meet Indians. They are excited to do so, and do not hold strong value judgments against those who are different from them. Throughout the course of the novel this will change, even as they befriend and enjoy the company of Dr. Aziz. He will eventually be accused of assault by Miss Quested, and even though she recants at trial the damage will already have been done. By providing a fictional story of the risks and rewards of globalization, Forster provides readers with a look at how unaccepting people truly are, regardless of how much they say they want to meet others and explore other cultures.
There are several elements in the novel that provide insight into how the book addresses globalization. Among these are the first scene in the mosque where the men are using the hookah and talking to one another (Forster, 5). This is stereotypical of people in that area of the world and time period, and a representation of how people from other places may see them. However, it is not necessarily a representation of how they actually are or how all of them act at any given time. Many fictional stories that are written about others areas of the world base themselves on stereotypes and theories, instead of actual visits to the region or what is true for the culture (Chanda, 35).
The scene is important for setting the stage regarding the "kind of people" Forster is portraying the Indians to be. Much of the book is based around the characters themselves, and the multidimensional lives they lead. Without understanding how different the Indians and the English really are in the eyes of Forster, it is difficult to understand how they could be friends but not friends, and how an accusation and a misunderstanding could change everything and basically tear apart what was starting to become a good friendship between the main characters in the book. The age of the book is part of the information that has to be considered when it comes to how Forster portrays different cultures, as well. Through globalization, much has been discovered about other cultures that may not have been known in previous years (Chomsky & McChesney, 12).
Additionally, the global society produced through the internet has changed some cultures, as well, and made them more blended with other cultures than they were in the past (James, 48). That is something not seen in Forster's book because it had not yet taken place, so the portrayal of cultures was more stilted than it might have been in a more modern-day rendition of Forster's book. The opening scene is important for another reason, as well, in that the reader is introduced to Dr. Aziz before being introduced to any of the other main characters. That allows readers to build up an impression of Dr. Aziz and his culture before seeing him interacting with the English people who are the other main characters in the novel.
Another element of the novel that shows how globalization has changed the world is the theme of the differences between the English and the Indians. In the year when Forster wrote the book, the idea of globalization as it is today was unrealistic. With that in mind, the way people in other countries were portrayed was often different from the way they would be portrayed in the modern day. Much more can be learned and understood about different people and different cultures now because of the internet and the level of international interaction that takes place online and through travel (James, 115). Forster not only shows the Indians as being more savage and far less cultured than the English, but he uses the accusations against Dr. Aziz to create the feeling that the Indians are not to be trusted even though they appear to be friends with the English.
As a third example of elements in the...
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