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Passing by Nella Larsen
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Passing (original 1929; edition 2010)

by Nella Larsen

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Written in 1929 Larsen conveys the thoughts and feelings as well as the turmoil and animosity toward African Americans that were prevalent to the times.

Irene is a light skinned negro who at many times can pass for a white person, provided she is not with people of her own race. It is on one of these such days that she takes tea by herself and finds a woman staring at her. Who she comes to find out is a friend from her past, also very light skinned. This woman, Clare, invites Irene to come to her home for a small party one night and after much hesitation she accepts. Here Irene, Clare, and Gertrude (another light skinned negro whom they both grew up with) enjoy each others’ company until Clare’s husband comes home. He is white and extremely racist and has no idea his wife is part negro.

This novella is about how Clare and Irene find their own identity apart from what has been branded on them. As much as it is about them finding their own identity it also deals with how the rest of the world sees them. ( )
  getrus | Mar 31, 2013 |
Had a minor hitch, needed a bigger memory card for the phone. got one now!. All set to go.

Trying out a new (to me) audiobook site - audiozero.
downloading it was easy to zip file, unzip, to mp3 then download to phone or mp3 player. or burn discs whatever. No mucking about searching for the right phone droid thingy..as is still the case with trying to find the right one for my phone e-reader..


update">http://www.audiozero.com/audiobook/passing-by-nella-larsen

update
; modern gizmos are beginning to irritate me..the memory card keeps popping out and I've had to tape it down. When it pops out (even taped down) the reader reverts back to the beginning of the book. I've listened to the first two chapters about 9 tmes now & to top it off my cat "Tolstoy Dickens" chewed through the headphones. No joy here yet.
  velvetink | Mar 31, 2013 |
A clear, well-written novella about identity that ends superbly. ( )
  g0ldenboy | Sep 24, 2011 |
Passing by Nella Larsen (first published 1929) captures the conflicts that young African-American women face in 1920s America. Although solidly a part of the Harlem Renaissance in the ways it tackles racial issues, Passing also magnificently captures a young woman’s repressed sexuality.

The terms “passing” refers to a light-skinned African-American acting as white in order to gain the social opportunities otherwise denied them. Larsen describes three young light-skinned women who occasionally “pass” in 1920s society. The first is Irene, who married a black man and passes only when she’s away from family, such as when she wants to stop in a restaurant or hotel otherwise denied her. Clare, on the other hand, is the other extreme: she has married a racist white man and lives exclusively as a white woman. Gertrude remains in between the two cultures: she has married a white man, but he knows of her black heritage and accepts it.

More on my blog
  rebeccareid | Jul 19, 2011 |
I feel like I should write a terribly literate, insightful, academically-inflected review of this book, but it seems I can't bring myself to devote the time to do it. Ergo, I will write a simplistic, subjective and analytically worthless review instead. I really enjoyed reading this. I rocketed through it in a matter of hours, even though I was reading it while on a temp gig manning the reception desk at a fabric wholesaler. The most unique aspect of the book to me is that I have never before read a novel from this particular time period that was focused on the interior monologue of a woman, much less a woman of color. It gave an interesting perspective on the fluidity of not just racial but broader social (socio-economic, political, etc.) identities during this era. I highly recommend it for anyone who is interested in fiction that deals with social construction of identities, or anyone who is looking to read something good that is contemporary to the late 1920s/early 1930s. ( )
1 vote magritteamour | May 7, 2011 |
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Epigraph
One three centuries removed
From the scenes his fathers loved,
Spicy grove, cinnamon tree,
What is Africa to me?
-Countée Cullen
Dedication
FOR
Carl Van Vechten
AND
Fania Marinoff
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It was the last letter in Irene Redfield's little pile of morning mail.
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(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
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Amazon.com Amazon.com Review (ISBN 0142437271, Paperback)

The heroine of Passing takes an elevator from the infernal August Chicago streets to the breezy rooftop of the heavenly Drayton Hotel, "wafted upward on a magic carpet to another world, pleasant, quiet, and strangely remote from the sizzling one that she had left below." Irene is black, but like her author, the Danish-African American Nella Larsen (a star of the 1920s to mid-1930s Harlem Renaissance and the first black woman to win a Guggenheim creative-writing award), she can "pass" in white society. Yet one woman in the tea room, "fair and golden, like a sunlit day," keeps staring at her, and eventually introduces herself as Irene's childhood friend Clare, who left their hometown 12 years before when her father died. Clare's father had been born "on the left hand"--he was the product of a legal marriage between a white man and a black woman and therefore cut off from his inheritance. So she was raised penniless by white racist relatives, and now she passes as white. Even Clare's violent white husband is in the dark about her past, though he teases her about her tan and affectionately calls her "Nig." He laughingly explains: "When we were first married, she was white as--as--well as white as a lily. But I declare she's getting darker and darker." As Larsen makes clear, Passing can also mean dying, and Clare is in peril of losing her identity and her life.

The tale is simple on the surface--a few adventures in Chicago and New York's high life, with lots of real people and race-mixing events described (explicated by Thadious M. Davis's helpful introduction and footnotes). But underneath, it seethes with rage, guilt, sex, and complex deceptions. Irene fears losing her black husband to Clare, who seems increasingly predatory. Or is this all in Irene's mind? And is everyone wearing a mask? Larsen's book is a scary hall of mirrors, a murder mystery that can't resolve itself. It sticks with you. --Tim Appelo

(retrieved from Amazon Thu, 14 Apr 2011 05:42:21 -0400)

(see all 7 descriptions)

Two light-skinned African American women, friends since childhood, have chosen to embrace their identities and live their lives in completely different ways.

(summary from another edition)

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