When reading the novel "The way to India", when watching movies with the same name, the characters that the readers and audience remember are Aziz, Adela, Ronnie, Mrs. Moore. One character in the story failed to deposit credits to herself: India himself. Throughout the novel, M. Forstar offered thought and words to India although she could not actually speak. David Lean also tried to create an independent role for India in his film. They somehow created a special role with their own individuality and motivation.
E. M Forster 's novel "Journey of India" has not examined racial discrimination in detail. It talks about Britain's strong national pride and their Indian concept. It describes British leaders and the propaganda they use to develop such a strong national pride. What makes racial discrimination is this strong national pride. People of my race are very convinced that different races are inferior. This is the hatred among the races hatched from a fragile shell.
A novelist E. M. Forster's "A Trip to India" (1924) considers East-West relations from India's perspective in the late Raja era. Foster's personal relationship and colonialism political connection through Radio Quarteud's story of Indian Aziz by the British woman Adel Quested and Malabar Cave with or without what happened between Malabar Caves Paul Scott It is a four-volume novel written by and covers the British theme of India, in this case the last year of British Radio in India. The series was written between 1965 and 1975. The Times called it "one of the most important landmarks of postwar novels."
"Indian Greek" (1924) is a novel written by British writer E. M. Forster with Latley of England and Indian independence movement in the 1920s. It was chosen as one of 100 great works of British literature of the 20th century by the modern library and was awarded the James Tate Black Memorial Novel Prize in 1924. Time magazine added this novel to the list of "full time 100 novel". Based on Foster's experience in India, the novel is getting its title from Walt Whitman's 1870 poem "The Passage in the Grass".