Critical Analysis Of A Passage To India

1696 Words4 Pages

A Passage to India begins and ends by posing the question of whether it is possible for an Englishman and Indian to ever be friends, within the context of British colonialism. Forster uses the characters Fielding and Aziz to illustrate the paramount value of friendship even when it conflicts with group loyalty and certain value and beliefs.Throughout history social psychologists have studied the idea of cross- cultural friendships and it has been known that building friendships as an adult is based off moral and social reasoning. A study was performed between friendship relationships in cultural context. In order to test this, the psychologist tested the same age groups from childhood (7 and 9 years) to adolescence (12 and 15 years) and young …show more content…

The results were that both the Western and Chinese participants used prototypical stage-related arguments referring to “playing and sharing at the first level, helping and supporting at the second level, trust and intimacy at the third level, and autonomy and integration of friendship in a wider system of relationships at level four” (Keller 2). However, culture was a main influence in the developmental dynamics in the emergence of levels in different topics of situation-specific reasoning as well as in general ideas. Forster explores the general issue of Britain’s political control of India on a more personal level, through the friendship between Aziz and Fielding. In doing so, Fielding and Aziz defy these results and prove to be worthy individuals who connect through frankness, intelligence and good …show more content…

Ralph, for example, stands for the good-hearted but not entirely effective leader of a democratic state, a ruler who wants to rule by law derived from the common consent. Piggy is his adviser, someone who is unable to rule because of his own social and physical shortcomings, but who is able to offer sound advice to the democratic leader. Jack, on the other hand, represents a totalitarian dictator, a ruler who appeals to the emotional responses of his followers. He rules by charisma and hysteria. Roger, the boy who takes the most joy in the slaughter of the pigs and who hurls the rock that kills Piggy, represents the henchman necessary for such a totalitarian ruler to stay in

Open Document