作者lance0904 ( 草田八)
看板Fiction
標題[心得] The Colonizer's Identity Problem in A Passage to India
時間Sat May 28 20:01:20 2011
Lance Huang
Professor L. M. Yang
English Literature: The Victorian and Twentieth Century
May 27th 2011
The Colonizer’s Identity Problem in A Passage to India
After finishing the novel, readers can easily figure out the conflict
between the British colonizers and the Indians in the book, A Passage to
India. From the very beginning to the end of the story, the British people
who stay in India live in better conditions than the local people they
govern; their snobbish and discriminated attitude toward the Indian people is
also prominent. It is hard to speak for the colonizers in the book, because
their acts show their guilty potential. However, I think that the struggle
between the British colonizers and the Indians, has an underlying reason that
is easy to be ignored—Identity Recognition.
Ahmad M.S. Abu Baker, an assistant professor in the English Department at
Al al-Bayt University/Jordan, mentions the identity problem in his essay—
Rethinking Identity: The Coloniser in E.M. Forster’s A Passage to India. He
pointed out that in the book, although they come from the same country,
British people can be separated as, the new comers and the Anglo-Indians. The
characters like Adela Quested and Mrs. Moore are new comers, whereas, Adela’
s fiancé, Ronny, is an Anglo-Indian. In India the word Anglo-Indian doesn’t
only mean what is defined on the Webster Dictionary “a person of English
citizenship born or living in India,” and furthermore, Baker defined it as
an identity, “the experienced colonialist.” (Baker, p.6)
As an Anglo-Indian, Ronny doesn’t belong to the British identity
anymore. In comparison with his fiancée Adela and his mother Mrs. Moore, who
have fresh experiences in this oriental place and posses a traditional
gentleman-like politeness to the Indians, whereas, Ronny keeps his distance
with the local people and intends to treat them as antagonists. In chapter
eight, which is about Adela’s image of Ronny, the narrator describes in the
beginning how readers can discover Ronny’s change after he left England to
go to India—“India had developed sides of his character that she had never
admired. His self-complacency, his censoriousness, his lack of subtlety.”
(Forster, p.85) Baker points out this discovery of one’s character’s
change and says, “The colony changes the personality of the colonizer in
almost every aspect even aesthetic appreciation.” (Baker, p.8) He says that
Adela discovers that Ronny used to scorn the play Cousin Kate but now Ronny
pretends it is a good play.
There are two factors needed for the change from one’s identity from
Brit to an Anglo-Indian: for the colonizers’ ease to govern the place and to
deal with India’s hostility towards the foreigners.
The colonizers build up an Anglo-Indian identity so the Indian people
recognize who is the authority and beneficiary of the colonial system and
also to improve the legitimacy of governing the Indians. The group of
Anglo-Indians will directly or indirectly force the newcomers to be one of
them, just like Ronny does to Adela and Mrs. Moore. They do this because if
the identity of Anglo-Indian is not accepted by any the British living there,
the legitimacy of the political position will be challenged and become
illegal. It is why Mr. Fielding, who is British and decides to support his
Indian friend Aziz, is scalded by other Anglo-Indians because his deed is
dangerous to Anglo-Indian’s authority structure.
Moreover, the colonizers rely on this identity recognition, because they
need strong power to overcome the hostile environment in India. Abu Baker
says, “Forster's India is hostile to foreigners and attacks its colonisers
ferociously, so as to force them to leave. Despite the British attempts to
'tame' India, it remains a 'wild' country.” (Baker, p.3) The Marabar Cave is
the symbol of this hostility. In the story Mrs. Moore and Adela visit the
cave and they both are stricken by the super natural power the cave
generates. Mrs. Moore’s Christian beliefs collapse after visiting the cave
and Adela is too frightened to make a wrong accusation damaging Dr. Aziz.
Actually, the British foreigners think India is not friendly because India
tries to make them become a part of it. In the chapter eight, the narrator
says, “But nothing in India is identifiable, the mere asking of a question
causes it to disappear or to merge in something else.” (Forster, p.91) India
is as a whole and is still desires to absorb and merge more elements into it.
Marabar Cave’s supernatural power is the expression of this desire, and is
successful because Mrs. Moore losses her Christian belief and becomes a part
of the supernatural power. Whereas, Adela combats with it and loses, she ends
up escaping to England.
This potential threatens the colonizers’ authority system, because their
identity as “Anglo-Indian” will ultimately be a part of India. Then they
will have no advantage from this colonial relationship. By preventing
themselves from becoming a part of India, these Anglo-Indians proclaim their
identity’s uniqueness again and again.
Citation:
Ahmad M.S. Abu Baker. " Rethinking Identity: The Coloniser in E.M. Forster’s
A Passage to India " Rev. of: The Weekly Standard 22 Oct. 2007: 68-85.
Chen-chi University Taipei, Taiwan. 14 May. 2011
http://www.nobleworld.biz/images/Abu_Baker.pdf
E. M. Forster. "A Passage to India Passage to India " Rev. of: Harcourt,
Inc.1924 Chen-chi University Taipei, Taiwan. 14 May. 2011
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