A comparison of E. M. Forster's "India Journey" and Virginia Woolf's "Towards the Lighthouse" is related to lack of intimacy in interpersonal relationships. Foster's novel is made in India, the difference between race and culture is the center of disharmony. Wolf's novels appeared in the family's summer house, the difference in sex is the center of disharmony. Despite this difference in size, the degree of inconsistency is nearly the same.
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."
In E. M. Forster 's "India Tour", readers have experienced multiple levels in the novel starting with structure, focusing on relationships and personality. The writer worked together to introduce deep cultural differences through the use of characters to fill the gap between the West and the East through the novel. To the reader, unfamiliar Indian culture may cause problems in the interpretation and understanding of actions and roles. Tom's explanation. He was drawn as a strong building: "This is a body that can make a big impact - a cruel body." He seems to be a cruel white-eye figure again. The words such as "arrogance", "strong", "brutality", "husky" etc. give him a very unpleasant feeling around him. This explanation is very objective and you can clearly understand what Tom looks like. There was explanation about Tom.
Cultural misunderstanding in "A Passage in India" One of the themes of E. M. Forster's novel "A Passage to India" is a cultural misunderstanding. The different cultural concepts and expectations of the hotel, social etiquette, and the role of religion in daily life are causes of misunderstandings between British and Indian Indians, British and Indian Indians, and Muslims and Hindus. - The image of what happened in Forrester and her extraordinary Malabar Cave that intersects Indian mysterious Moore's wife has captivated critics for decades. This issue has been drawing attention, which is inconsistent with Mrs. M.'s secondary role in her trip to India. On the surface she plays a supporting role, but many unresolved questions in the novel seem to focus on her experience.