Article Details

Social Reality in the Writings of E.M Forst | Original Article

Pinki Saha*, Uma Mishra, in Journal of Advances and Scholarly Researches in Allied Education | Multidisciplinary Academic Research

ABSTRACT:

In literature, the link between people and nature has been extensively studied. The primary theme of British and American transcendentalism, which permeates E.M. Forster's work A Room with a View, is spirituality, which connects humans and environment (1908). Nature and its place in human life are central to this story, and Forster's attitude on nature and its role in human life is startling and pertinent now when eco-awareness is one of humanity's main aims. It is said that Forster celebrates independence and variety via his images of nature and the environment, which are examined in this article together with the narrative framework and the characters. However, Forster introduces a unique ecological philosophy through overt comparisons and parallelism of environmental fluctuations with the events that take place in the lives of the main characters, highlighting the inseparability of humans from nature and vice versa, thus expressing both humility and rapture with regard to the created symbiosis, its beauty and inscrutability.