Passing

Passing

Softcover
3.847

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Description

Clare Kendry has severed all ties to her past. Elegant, fair-skinned and ambitious, she is married to a white man who is unaware of her African-American heritage. When she renews her acquaintance with her childhood friend Irene, who has not hidden her origins, both women are forced to reassess their marriages, the lies they have told - and to confront the secret fears they have buried within themselves. Nella Larsen's intense, taut and psychologically nuanced portrayal of lives and identities dangerously colliding established her as a leading writer of America's Harlem Renaissance.

The Penguin English Library - collectable general readers' editions of the best fiction in English, from the eighteenth century to the end of the Second World War.

Book Information

Main Genre
Novels
Sub Genre
Classics
Format
Softcover
Pages
128
Price
10.50 €

Posts

6
All
5

This is not only a book about passing as white and all its implications, it's also about forcing yourself into someones life. I think the biggest theme is dishonesty, in various different ways. For such a short book it is full of moments that hit hard, that show someones secret feelings as well as how they think they need to behave. Clare and Irene are fascinating characters, both flawed in very different ways, with one of the books greatest strengths being how well it lets you into Irenes head.

5

Inhaltlich und sprachlich immer noch aktuell. Es ist fast wie bei einem drohenden Unglück, man möchte es nicht sehen und kann doch den Blick nicht abwenden.

4

There’s so much negativity towards white passing people and how they used their light skin to ensure they’re safety, but it has to be jealously and colorism that influences that. They could not choose if they were white passing, and they chose to use that privilege to make sure they wouldn’t be hurt. Yes, it sucks that not everybody has that same privilege, but I’m all for people doing what they need to do to live. Also, the way that fetishization was described was absolutely perfect.

It was, she cried silently, enough to suffer as a woman, an individual, on one's own account, without having to suffer for the race as well. It was a brutality, and undeserved. Took me long enough to read this very short book, but I finally finished it! Classics aren't really my cup of tea, I usually hate the old language and the racist undertones. However, it was about time to read a classic by a Black woman, and I liked it more than I anticipated. It's really thought-provoking but the open end left me unsatisfied. Yet the story was entirely new to me, I didn't know anything about it and I was curious to find out more about Clare and Irene.

3

Like a lot of modern american the end is the best part!!!! kinda reminiscent of ethan frome

5

Beunruhigend. Für mich eine sehr fremde Welt, überraschende Sprache. Und das Ende ein Schock.

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