Audiobook: Passage to India
- Download Chapter 1 audio
- Download Chapter 2 audio
- Download Chapter 3 audio
- Download Chapter 4 audio
- Download Chapter 5 audio
- Download Chapter 6 audio
- Download Chapter 7 audio
- Download Chapter 8 audio
- Download Chapter 9 audio
- Download Chapter 10 audio
- Download Chapter 11 audio
- Download Chapter 12 audio
- Download Chapter 13 audio
- Download Chapter 14 audio
- Download Chapter 15 audio
- Download Chapter 16 audio
- Download Chapter 17 audio
- Download Chapter 18 audio
- Download Chapter 19 audio
- Download Chapter 20 audio
- Download Chapter 21 audio
- Download Chapter 22 audio
- Download Chapter 23 audio
- Download Chapter 24 audio
- Download Chapter 25 audio
- Download Chapter 26 audio
- Download Chapter 27 audio
- Download Chapter 28 audio
- Download Chapter 29 audio
- Download Chapter 30 audio
- Download Chapter 31 audio
- Download Chapter 32 audio
- Download Chapter 33 audio
- Download Chapter 34 audio
- Download Chapter 35 audio
- Download Chapter 36 audio
- Download Chapter 37 audio
Audiobooks Genres
Author
Description
E. M. Forster’s A Passage to India (1924) is widely acclaimed as one of the hundred best literary works of 20th century. Time magazine rates it among the top 100 English-language novels of all time.
A Passage to India is set at the moment when the lasting supremacy of the British Raj could no longer be taken for granted. Imperial power had been effectively supported by old and deep-seated religious and cultural conflicts between India’s Hindu and Muslim populations, which divided and sapped the local powers ultimately needed to overthrew imperial rule in 1947. Forster illustrates how this rift begins to be overshadowed by the increasing resistance of all Indians to the extreme racism, oppression and socio-political mismanagement of British rule.
The work is perhaps best known for his brilliant development of the relationships between his characters, which are fraught by a wide range of precarious cultural, social, political and economic dualisms: e.g., Occident / Orient; imperialist / colonial; men / women. He carries the idea expressed in his famous words “only connect” (from Howards End) to its limits, examining the difficulties – often the inherent impossibility – of “connection” across racial, sexual, religious and social divides. - Summary by Kirsten Wever
Liked what you heard? Share it with your friends and family!.