In the novel 'The way to India', Foster is trying to reveal cultural exchanges between the local Indians and their colonialists. It takes into account whether there may be a personal relationship between British aborigines to shape mutual satisfaction. In this novel, he is trying to think whether locals can contact the UK and vice versa (Forster, 1979: 26). This novel explores the friendship between England and India, and is paying attention to the two societies, local people and British people seen there.
Early British Settlements in North America established the initial contact between British and Native Americans. About twenty years after the mysterious disappearance of Roanoke's settlers British settled in the Chesapeake Bay area in the early 17th century. In commemoration of their king James I, they called Jamestown. Shortly after Jamestown settled, about 200 native American groups attacked the UK as British tried to exploit Native American labor and wealth. The UK thinks that there is no problem in having a peaceful social country, but at the same time it uses Native American as an inexpensive working form. Native Americans provide food and other essentials to the UK, but tension is ongoing. Because of the big difference between culture and belief, a simple misunderstanding in a trade agreement may turn into a violent confrontation
Between 1754 and 1829, the British policy of North American indigenous peoples pursued three main objectives: recruitment and supply of local military allies; trade and diplomatic controls; and negotiations to preserve indigenous territorial integrity Border Solution These policies played a decisive role in the UK victory against France in the Seven Years War (1756-1763), but since 1763 they have become rapidly unpopular among North American settlers It was. By 1776, settlers' dissatisfaction with empire supervision constituted a major dissatisfaction with the British. After the Revolutionary War (1775-1783), the continuation of Canadian Indian Indian and Native American influence was seen by many Americans as a threat to the survival of the Republic itself.