E.M. Forster
Sort by:
- E.M. Forster: An Invented LifeDuring his writing career, Forster enjoyed success and endured criticism. Fame, however, seems to have been less of a concern to him than the fact that his writing enabled him to advocate secret ideals, criticisms, personal needs, and preferred lifestyle.
- The Emotional Value of Material Possessions in Howard's EndThe novel suggests that a civilized society depends on many different connections. Connections to places and things have merit because they evoke memories of human connections.
- "Caves" Chapter in E.M. Forster's A Passage to IndiaThe setting in A Passage to India is important. This is an analysis of the the opening of the "Caves" chapter. The setting description foreshadows the trip to the Marabar caves with the motifs of nothingness.
- "Mosque" Chapter in E.M. Forster's A Passage to IndiaThis brief analysis of the chapter, "Mosque," in E.M. Forster's A Passage to India discusses the role of the description of the setting in the beginning in the theme of nothingness and foreshadowing the trip to the caves.
- A Brief Analysis of Maurice by E.M. ForsterLanguage is very important in Maurice and Durham's relationship. I argue that Forster is commenting on language itself, and even perhaps is pointing back to the work itself as a book, making it a meta-novel.
- Howards End: A Summary of the Novel by E.M. ForsterHowards End is a novel by E.M. Forster, published first in 1910. It is an English novel.
The A-Z of WritingCollection of quotes by famous writers- Demonstrations of Collectivism's Inherent Violence in E. M. Forster's "A Passage to India"Collectivist attitudes inevitably lead to violence, because collectivism openly flouts the possibility of civil interaction among people who are thought to belong to distinct "groups." E. M. Forster's "A Passage to India" demonstrates such acts of collectivist upheaval.
- How Collectivist Attitudes Harm the Best Individuals in E. M. Forster's "A Passage to India"E. M. Forster's "A Passage to India" illustrates the inhibitive nature of collectivism to aspiring individuals. Racist hatred of Dr. Aziz, an intelligent and educated Indian, leads the characters in the book to overlook Aziz's virtues and blindly accuse him.