preview

Analysis Of Nella Larsen 's ' Passing

Good Essays

Nella Larsen’s novella Passing, set in Harlem, New York City in the 1920s, tells the story of the reunion of two childhood friends, Clare Kendry and Irene Redfield, and the resulting exploration of race and finding of one’s identity. The novel is titled for the central theme of racial “passing,” enacted by Clare Kendry, who passes as white with her husband, John Bellew, serving as the catalyst to the tragic events that propel the plot. Passing is defined as “the ability of a person to be regarded as a member of social groups other than their own, such as a different race, ethnicity, caste, social class, gender, age and/or disability status, generally with the purpose of gaining social acceptance.” The phrase became notorious as being the traversal from black to white during the early 20th century when race became a rapidly changing factor in America. Returning black soldiers from WWI, southern blacks migrating northward for industrial work, and black artists spawning the renowned Harlem Renaissance were all seeking the opportunities that only whites could acquire in a country plagued by segregation, anti-miscegenation, and Jim Crow laws, as well as anti-black hate groups such as the Ku Klux Klan. Due to the complexity of race, and it’s existence as a mere social construct as opposed to it being a real human trait, two women are exemplified as being able to pass: Irene and Clare. Clare Kendry represents the tragic mulatta, a stock character created in early African-American

Get Access