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In contrast to being ‘fairly straightforward’ treatments of ‘repressed homosexuality’, many of Forster’s posthumous short stories respond to inhibited sexuality in highly self-conscious ways that inflect their very form. ‘The Other Boat’ represents the illicit sexual relationship between Lionel March, an aspiring colonial captain, and a mysterious, racially ambiguous fellow passenger, Cocoanut, as they share a cabin on a crossing to India. Presiding over the intensity of the narrative is an analeptic episode that recounts their initial chance encounter as youths during a contrary voyage to Britain. Written in 1913 and redrafted in 1947 and 1957, the suggestion of an untenable homosexual romance inflects this short story with urgent brevity, amplified by the short form and the tragic murder-suicide with which it concludes. Through conscious and unconscious engagements with the tension between homosexual and heterosexual desires Forster suggests potential correlations between sexuality and form, anticipating and complicating later critical responses.
Often criticised for its escapist ending, Maurice is surprisingly radical if viewed in the tradition of nineteenth-century political writings. The Chartist writers of the 1840s did not have a solution for the Condition of England question so their radical short stories portrayed characters that were denied equal rights by the state as either dying or leaving England for good. Far from being a radical writer, Forster nevertheless faced a similar dilemma: how to create a positive literary homosexual identity and what to do with a cross-class same-sex couple for which ostracism seemed inevitable. Forster wrote Maurice after his first journey to India, yet instead of giving Maurice and Alec a happily-ever-after in the colonies or Argentina, he allowed them to settle in the English greenwood – fairytale-esque and pastoral yet seditiously subversive by virtue of its very existence. By doing so, he kept the socially seditious element firmly on the edges of English society as he denied it the easiest solution to this specific aspect of the Condition of England question. Maurice is a product of English society, yet despite being Cambridge-educated and upper-middle-class, Maurice finds his happy ending with Scudder, not Clive. Lytton Strachey was one of many readers who, despite knowing that Forster’s novel was inspired by Edward Carpenter’s cross-class relationship with George Merrill, considered the ending unrealistic and implausible, the class chasm between Maurice and Alec being considered too wide for a happy relationship. Yet it was Forster’s decision to give his protagonist a happy ending against all odds that makes Maurice different from most other contemporary gay fiction. Therefore, this paper concerns itself with the hypothesis that Forster’s choice of ending the novel is more radical and subversive than has frequently been argued in the past.
E. M Forster's Maurice achieves a bold defiance of heteronormativity at a time when homosexuality was a crime, the exploration of which forms the principal purpose of this paper. An attempt has been made to define 'heteronormativity' and expose the means by which it exerts itself-its calculated reinforcement of rigid binary categorisation, amalgamation of 'sex', 'gender' and 'sexuality', and collaboration with the contemporary political hegemony. A socioeconomic and psychological study of the principal characters is then undertaken to portray how each, through varied means and in varying degrees, transgresses and subverts the normative. Special emphasis is placed on Clive's defection to the lure of heteronormativity, with its promise of the perpetuation of lineage by progeny, and this is connected to the dilapidation of British aristocracy in the early twentieth century. An analysis of the dialectics of a 'Platonic' abstraction of same sex desire and its erotic celebration is then endeavoured by a comparative study of Maurice's relationship with the Cambridge educated Clive on the
E. M. Forster's A Passage to India is obviously " more than a fictional travelogue, a kind ofInside India " (Karl & Magalaner, 119). It is concerned with matter that may generate confusion, susceptibility and distinct prejudice and set two individuals, even two races face to face in relation to belligerence, intolerance and prejudice. This paper will throw light on thecases that are responsible for encountering the position of East and West. As a text says what it does not say, my probe will dig out the political tension of Indian life and racial relationship in colonial setting from the fictionalized Indian conditions as depicted in A Passage to India. Introduction The novel entitled A Passage to Indiais inspired mainly from E. M. Forster's own experience as a temporary resident in India and his coming in contact with the Indian people and with the British servants, called Anglo-Indians, who were a narrow-minded caste of chauvinistic snobs. A Passage to Indiais a book that has been balanced by Forster for a long time as it was written in 1913 and not published until 1924 and as Boris Ford said: 'Forster, representing the finest and most human in the liberal spirit, began in " APassage to India " the tradition of using Indian life as an image of personal experiences'(1983:319). Although A Passage to Indiais a highly symbolic or even mystical text, it also aims to be a realistic documentation of the attitudes of British colonial officials in India, primarily in Chandapore, a city along the Ganges River, notable only for the nearby Marbar caves. Forster spends large sections of the novel characterizing different typical attitudes the English hold toward the Indians whom they control. Forster's satire is harsh on Englishwomen, whom the author depicts as overwhelmingly racist, self-righteous, and viciously condescending to the native population. Some of the Englishmen in the novel are as nasty as the women, but Forster more often identifies Englishmen as men who, though condescending and unable to relate to Indians on an individual level, are largely well-meaning and invested in their jobs. For all Forster's criticism of the British manner of governing India, however, he does not appear to question the right of the British Empire to rule India. He suggests that the British would be well served by becoming kinder and more sympathetic to the Indians with which they live. A Passage to Indiais an exploration of Anglo-Indian friendship. Forster pays great attention to the description of the two societies that are to be found in India, namely the natives, the Indians, and the new comers, the British, but also to way they interact and to the relationships they establish. Throughout the novel, the barriers of inter-racial friendship in a colonial context are explored thoroughly: A Passage to India is a classic example of how different cultures,when forced to intermix, misunderstand
Journal of Human and Social Sciences, 2021
Research Artichle As an Edwardian author and a 'reluctant modernist' E.M. Forster penned several short stories as well as great novels. In the three selected short stories titled "The Story of a Panic", "The Story of a Siren", and "The Celestial Omnibus", Forster makes use of fantasy fiction based on the feeling of desire. The aim of this paper is to demonstrate how Forster's emotive fantasies are constructed through features of "longing for another world or a lost world" and/or "finding our own world enchanted". Some of the underlying motifs such as mythological figures, pastoral images, beauty and individualism are also part of the discussion. Using the theory of Todorov's fantasy and Manlove's arguments regarding fantasy fiction as a springboard for discussion, this study argues that even though the selected short stories by Forster are shaped by desire as emotive fantasies, the feeling of desire does not lead to a satisfaction; in other words, desire is an inconlusive and discontinuous feeling which contributes to the formation of the stories.
Essays in Criticism, 2011
2010
"The volume intended to commemorate the 40th anniversary of E. M. Forster's death. It consists of ten papers by various authors which deal with various aspects of Forster's oeuvre, creating a new overview of his works from his novels, through his essays to his only opera libretto. List of Contents Anna Kwiatkowska - Ironic Reflections on Life: E. M. Forster’s Novels and Henri Bergson’s Philosophy of Laughter Paweł Wojtas - E. M. Forster’s Uneasy Bildungsroman: Exploring the Meanders of Existential Aporias in The Longest Journey Krzysztof Kramarz - Deletion, Metaphor and Footnote: the Analysis of Polish Translations of A Room with a View Tomasz Dobrogoszcz - A Passage to OU-BOUM – Homi Bhabha reads E. M. Forster Krzysztof Fordoński - E. M. Forster’s Geography of Homosexual Desire Piotr Urbański - “The love that passes understanding has come to me” – Remarks on Staging Billy Budd Heiko Zimmermann - Teaching E. M. Forster in 2010 – Essayistic Reflections Krzysztof Fordoński - Polish Aspects of E. M. Forster – A Postscript From the cover - an excerpt from review "This collection of essays edited by Krzysztof Fordoński, a renowned specialist in E.M. Forster’s novels, is devoted to various aspects of Forster’s literary output and undoubtedly will be a landmark publication. The book successfully presents all the major issues important in Forster’s works for the contemporary reader: cultural differences, existential and aesthetic problems, varieties of sexual desire, educational challenges. These aspects are discussed from the viewpoint of postcolonial, gender, translation, educational, and cultural studies. This volume should be easily accessible to a wider, international audience, readers who enjoy Forster’s novels and are interested in learning about a variety of issues associated with his life and works." Prof. Piotr Wilczek, Institute for Interdisciplinary Studies „Artes Liberales”, University of Warsaw"
2020
A Passage to India is a postcolonial novel written by a colonizer about the British rule in India whereby he highlights the racial prejudices and tensions of both the colonizer and the colonized. The novel is a realistic document about the British rule in India. It is the representative postcolonial novel which deals with the racial conflict between the Orient and the Occident. The novel shows how the ruling Anglo-Indians became arrogant and how they destroyed the chance of winning over their Indian subjects. A passage to India is thus a valuable critique of the inhumane treatment of the Indians by their British masters. The racial barrier between the West and the East has been brilliantly and artistically depicted in the novel. Throughout the novel, the barriers of inter-racial friendship in a colonial context are explored thoroughly.
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