Thursday, October 24, 2019
What is A Room With A View about? Essay example -- English Literature
What is A Room With A View about, in your opinion? What methods does  E.M. Forster use to convey this message to the reader?    A Room With A View is about the social change occurring in England in  the early 20th century, post Queen Victoria's death. Darwin had just  published his book on the theory of evolution which was the catalyst  for the introduction of more liberal and secular ideas into a  conservative and religious England. In order to explain this process  of change, Forster likens it to the Renaissance, which is why it is  significant that A Room With A View begins in Italy. The problem with  a rapidly changing society is that members of that society do not  necessarily know how to behave because the boundaries are changing and  this is what Forster is trying to portray in A Room With A View.    Every character in the novel can be categorised into one of two  groups, the Victorian/Medieval characters and the 20th  Century/Renaissance characters. Certain characters symbolise different  periods. However, Forster is skilful enough to make these characters  realistic which is why they are capable of contradiction; for quite a  few characters, the reader believes that they belong to one of these  groups but then their behaviour is suddenly contrary to that group  thus confusing the reader as to what period they symbolise.    For example Miss Bartlett is immediately perceived by the reader as a  'Victorian' because in the first chapter she refuses Mr Emerson's  generosity because she feels it would be improper to accept. However  at the end of the novel, the reader is made aware that Miss Bartlett  purposefully does not interrupt a conversation between Lucy and Mr  Emerson, perfectly aware that he could persuade Lucy to admi...              ...es, where people believed in love, but despise  those defied convention to marry for love.    His novel is successful at doing this because it glorifies passion and  impulsiveness; he mocks those symbolising convention such as Cecil, Mr  Eager and Miss Bartlett and endorses those that represent love and  liberalisation. Cecil doesn't just represent convention he also  represents 'culture'. Lucy and George marry in the end to everyone's  surprise because it is Forster's hope to encourage romance. Although  Forster's novel is dealing with specific events occurring in English  history it never the less remains a novel which is still enjoyed today  because it deals with the universal theme that love conquers all. The  characters are creations that live today just as they did as when the  novel was first published, because they are so realistic and familiar  to the reader.                      
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