Passing, novel by Nella Larsen, published in 1929.
Larsen’s novel, which closely followed her prizewinning Quicksand (1928), explores the complexities of racial identity in early 20th-century New York. Its central character, Irene Redfield, is a member of the African American bourgeoisie that became increasingly fashionable and visible in New York during the Harlem Renaissance era of the 1920s. Irene is married to a Black doctor and, prominent in Harlem society, dedicates her life to charitable and social causes. However, an meeting at a Chicago hotel with childhood friend Clare Kendry—who, having been raised by two alcoholic white aunts, has concealed her mixed parentage in order to assume a white identity—serves to reveal the insecurities and anxieties that lie beneath this seemingly complacent and comfortable life.
Passing contains elements of the roman à clef, for Larsen, the daughter of a white mother and Black father, was deeply interested in questions of racial identity. At its most obvious, the novel offers a satire of the mores, pretensions, and ambitions of the Harlem Renaissance. The novel’s main concern is with exploring the consequences of Clare Kendry’s deliberate subversion of early 20th-century America’s stridently enforced desire for racial purity, which both confounds and demonstrates its power. Clare has married a wealthy, racist white American, and many of her subsequent actions—from bearing his child to introducing him to Irene—involve the risk that her “true” identity will be revealed; as Larsen writes in words that could apply equally to either character, “Race! The thing that bound and suffocated her.” Larsen explores this difficult territory, which is fraught with assumptions about authenticity, purity, and knowledge, by skillfully providing the reader with a silhouette of what cannot be said. In the end, it seems that Irene’s own deep ambivalence about Clare is the most dangerous and unstable force of all.
The year after the publication of Passing, Larsen became the first Black woman to win a Guggenheim Fellowship. She is considered, along with Zora Neale Hurston, to be the most important woman to have taken part in the Harlem Renaissance movement, and Passing regularly appears in African American studies and women’s studies curricula today. A film version of the novel was released in 2021.