E. M. Forster: A Literary LifeForster's literary career is assessed in relation to works that mark its phases: his suburban novels, the Indian novel, the BBC talks, and first and last, his short fiction. This study traces evidences of his keen awareness of political and social undercurrents as discovered in the works: the importance of personal relations, culture as a precious heritage, and the creative artist as definer of cultural values and encourager of those who should preserve them. |
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Page xi
... turn an artist upside down . ' He had ' stopped creating rather than become uncreative : ... It's rather that the ... turning - points so keen that it turned the genre itself in a new direc- tion . All passages from E. M. Forster's ...
... turn an artist upside down . ' He had ' stopped creating rather than become uncreative : ... It's rather that the ... turning - points so keen that it turned the genre itself in a new direc- tion . All passages from E. M. Forster's ...
Page 9
... turn to his son Henry , Forster's great - uncle , who was born in 1800 and died in 1881. Battersea Rise became the centre of activi- ties of the like - minded families who built their own homes around the Common and became known as the ...
... turn to his son Henry , Forster's great - uncle , who was born in 1800 and died in 1881. Battersea Rise became the centre of activi- ties of the like - minded families who built their own homes around the Common and became known as the ...
Page 10
... turn out , so that the move to Rooksnest in 1883 became Mrs Forster's cautious declaration of independence . She took care not to cut the Thornton tie altogether , but the move made her son more than ever the centre of her existence ...
... turn out , so that the move to Rooksnest in 1883 became Mrs Forster's cautious declaration of independence . She took care not to cut the Thornton tie altogether , but the move made her son more than ever the centre of her existence ...
Page 15
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Page 17
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Abinger Edition Ackerley Adela Aldeburgh Aligarh Anglo-Indian audience Aziz Aziz's Barnes became become Benjamin Britten Billy Budd British Britten Broadcasting Cambridge Chandrapore Crewe Culture Darling Diary E. M. Forster Edward Arnold England English Eric Crozier feeling felt fiction Fielden Florence Barger Forster told Forster wrote friends G. M. Trevelyan George Ghalib's Godbole Godbole's Government Grisewood Hardinge Henry Herriton Hindu homosexual Honeychurch Howards End Ibid ideas Imperial kind King's College knew Letters Listener literary literature London Longest Journey Margaret Masood Maurice Men's College Miss Moghul Montagu Morison Muslim never Notebook Journal official opera Oxford P. N. Furbank Passage to India personal relations Peter Grimes Pinmay political Quoted radio Reith Rickie Rickie's Ronny Rooksnest Sassoon Sawston says Service social stories talk thing Third Programme Thornton thought tion Tonbridge Trevelyan Unsigned review Vaishnava Victorian wanted West Hackhurst Wilcox write