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Nella Larsen

Nellallitea "Nella" Larsen (born Nellie Walker; April 13, 1891 – March 30, 1964) was an American novelist. Working as a nurse and a librarian, she published two novels, Quicksand (1928) and Passing (1929), and a few short stories. Though her literary output was scant, she earned recognition by her contemporaries.

Nella Larsen
Larsen in 1928
Born
Nellie Walker

(1891-04-13)April 13, 1891
DiedMarch 30, 1964(1964-03-30) (aged 72)
Other namesNellye Larson
Nellie Larsen
Nella Larsen Imes
EducationFisk University
University of Copenhagen
Lincoln Hospital
New York Public Library
Occupations
  • Novelist
  • librarian
  • nurse
Notable workQuicksand (1928)
Passing (1929)
MovementHarlem Renaissance
Spouse
(m. 1919; div. 1933)
AwardsGuggenheim Fellowship

A revival of interest in her writing has occurred since the late 20th century, when issues of racial and sexual identity have been studied. Her works have been the subjects of numerous academic studies, and she is now widely lauded as "not only the premier novelist of the Harlem Renaissance, but also an important figure in American modernism."[1]

Early life edit

Nella Larsen was born Nellie Walker, in a poor district of south Chicago known as the Levee, on April 13, 1891. Her mother was Pederline Marie Hansen, a Danish immigrant, born 1868 in Brahetrolleborg parish on the island of Fyn (Funen). Her mother, who went by Mary Larsen (sometimes misspelled Larson) in the U.S., worked as a seamstress and domestic worker in Chicago. She died in 1951 in Santa Monica, Los Angeles County.[2]

Her father was Peter Walker, believed to be a mixed-race Afro-Caribbean immigrant from the Danish West Indies. He was probably a descendant on his paternal side of Henry or George Walker, white men from Albany, New York, who were known to have settled in the Danish West Indies in about 1840.[3] In that Danish colonial society, racial lines were more fluid than in the former slave states of the United States. Walker may never have identified as "Negro."[3] He soon disappeared from the lives of Nella and her mother; she said he had died when she was very young. At this time, Chicago was filled with immigrants, but the Great Migration of blacks from the South had not begun. Near the end of Walker's childhood, the black population of the city was 1.3% in 1890 and 2% in 1910.[4]

Marie married again, to Peter Larsen aka Peter Larson (b. 1867), a fellow Danish immigrant. In 1892 the couple had a daughter, Anna Elizabeth, also known as Lizzie (married name Gardner).[2] Nellie took her stepfather's surname, sometimes using versions spelled Nellye Larson and Nellie Larsen, before settling finally on Nella Larsen.[5] The mixed family moved west to a mostly white neighborhood of German and Scandinavian immigrants, but encountered discrimination because of Nella. When Nella was eight years old, they moved a few blocks back east.

The American author and critic Darryl Pinckney wrote of her anomalous situation:

as a member of a white immigrant family, she [Larsen] had no entrée into the world of the blues or of the black church. If she could never be white like her mother and sister, neither could she ever be black in quite the same way that Langston Hughes and his characters were black. Hers was a netherworld, unrecognizable historically and too painful to dredge up.[2]

From 1895 to 1898, Larsen visited Denmark with her mother and her half-sister. While she was unusual in Denmark because of being of mixed race, she had some good memories from that time, including playing Danish children’s games, which she later wrote about in English. After returning to Chicago in 1898, she attended a large public school. At the same time as the migration of Southern blacks increased to the city, so had European immigration. Racial segregation and tensions had increased in the immigrant neighborhoods, where both groups competed for jobs and housing.

Her mother believed that education could give Larsen an opportunity and supported her in attending Fisk University, a historically black university in Nashville, Tennessee. A student there in 1907–08, for the first time Larsen was living within an African-American community, but she was still separated by her own background and life experiences from most of the students, who were primarily from the South, with most descended from former slaves. Biographer George B. Hutchinson found that Larsen was expelled for some violation of Fisk's strict dress or conduct codes for women.[6] Larsen went on her own to Denmark, where she lived for a total of three years, between 1909 and 1912, and attended the University of Copenhagen.[7] After returning to the United States, she continued to struggle to find a place where she could belong.[2]

Nursing career edit

In 1914, Larsen enrolled in the nursing school at New York City's Lincoln Hospital and Nursing Home. The institution was founded in the 19th century in Manhattan as a nursing home to serve black people, but the hospital elements had grown in importance. The total operation had been relocated to a newly constructed campus in the South Bronx. At the time, the hospital patients were primarily white; the nursing home patients were primarily black; the doctors were white males; and the nurses and nursing students were black females.[6] As Pinckney writes: "No matter what situation Larsen found herself in, racial irony of one kind or another invariably wrapped itself around her."[2]

Upon graduating in 1915, Larsen went South to work at the Tuskegee Institute in Tuskegee, Alabama, where she soon became head nurse at its John A. Andrew Memorial Hospital and training school.[8] While at Tuskegee, she was introduced to Booker T. Washington's model of education and became disillusioned with it. As it was combined with poor working conditions for nurses at Tuskegee, Larsen decided to leave after a year or so.[citation needed]

She returned to New York in 1916, where she worked for two years as a nurse at Lincoln Hospital. After earning the second-highest score on a civil service exam, Larsen was hired by the city Bureau of Public Health as a nurse. She worked for them in the Bronx through the 1918 flu pandemic, in "mostly white neighborhoods" and with white colleagues. Afterwards she continued with the city as a nurse.[9]

Marriage and family edit

In 1919, Larsen married Elmer Imes, a prominent physicist; he was the second African American to earn a PhD in physics. After her marriage, she sometimes used the name Nella Larsen Imes in her writing. A year after her marriage, she published her first short stories.

The couple moved to Harlem in the 1920s, where their marriage and life together had contradictions of class. As Pinckney writes:

By virtue of her marriage, she was a member of Harlem's black professional class, many of them people of color with partially European ancestry. She and her husband knew the NAACP leadership: W.E.B. Du Bois, Walter White, James Weldon Johnson. However, because of her low birth and mixed parentage, and because she did not have a college degree, Larsen was alienated from the black middle class, whose members emphasized college and family ties, and black fraternities and sororities.[2]

Her mixed racial ancestry was not itself unusual in the black middle class. But many of these individuals, such as Langston Hughes, had more distant European ancestors. He and others formed an elite of mixed race or people of color, some of whom had ancestors who had been free people of color well before the American Civil War. This had given many families an advantage in establishing themselves and gaining educations in the North. In the 1920s, most African Americans in Harlem were exploring and emphasizing their black heritage.

Imes's scientific studies and achievement placed him in a different class than Larsen. The Imes couple had difficulties by the late 1920s, when he had an affair with a white woman at Fisk University, where he was a professor. Imes and Larsen would divorce in 1933.[2][5]

Librarian and literary career edit

 
Seward Park Library where Larsen worked

In 1921, Larsen worked nights and weekends as a volunteer with librarian Ernestine Rose, to help prepare for the first exhibit of "Negro art" at the New York Public Library (NYPL). Encouraged by Rose, she became the first black woman to graduate from the NYPL Library School. It was run by Columbia University and opened the way for integration of library staff.[10]

Larsen passed her certification exam in 1923. She worked her first year as a librarian at the Seward Park Branch on the Lower East Side, which was predominantly Jewish. There she had strong support from her white supervisor Alice Keats O'Connor, as she had from Rose. They, and another branch supervisor where she worked, supported Larsen and helped integrate the staff of the branches.[10] Larsen transferred to the Harlem branch, as she was interested in the cultural excitement in the African-American neighborhood, a destination for migrants from across the country.[10]

In October 1925, Larsen took a sabbatical from her job for health reasons and began to write her first novel.[11] In 1926, having made friends with important figures in the Negro Awakening (which became known as the Harlem Renaissance), Larsen gave up her work as a librarian.[citation needed]

She became a writer active in Harlem's interracial literary and arts community, where she became friends with Carl Van Vechten, a white photographer and writer.[12] In 1928, Larsen published Quicksand, a largely autobiographical novel. It received significant critical acclaim, if not great financial success.[citation needed]

In 1929, she published Passing, her second novel, which was also critically successful. It dealt with issues of two mixed-race African-American women who were childhood friends and had taken different paths of racial identification and marriage. One identified as black and married a black doctor; the other passed as white and married a white man, without revealing her African ancestry. The book explored their experiences of coming together again as adults.[citation needed]

In 1930, Larsen published "Sanctuary", a short story for which she was accused of plagiarism.[13] "Sanctuary" was said to resemble the British writer Sheila Kaye-Smith's short story, "Mrs. Adis", first published in the United Kingdom in 1919. Kaye-Smith wrote on rural themes, and was very popular in the US. Some critics thought the basic plot of "Sanctuary," and some of the descriptions and dialogue, were virtually identical to Kaye-Smith's work.[14]

The scholar H. Pearce has disputed this assessment, writing that, compared to Kaye-Smith's tale, "Sanctuary" is "... longer, better written and more explicitly political, specifically around issues of race – rather than class as in 'Mrs Adis'."[15] Pearce thinks that Larsen reworked and updated the tale into a modern American black context. Pearce also notes that in Kaye-Smith's 1956 book, All the Books of My Life, the author said she had based "Mrs Adis" on a 17th-century story by St Francis de Sales, Catholic bishop of Geneva. It is unknown whether she knew of the Larsen controversy in the United States. Larsen herself said the story came to her as "almost folk-lore", recounted to her by a patient when she was a nurse.[16]

No plagiarism charges were proved. Larsen received a Guggenheim Fellowship even in the aftermath of the controversy, worth roughly $2,500 at the time, and was the first African-American woman to do so.[17] She used it to travel to Europe for several years, spending time in Mallorca and Paris, where she worked on a novel about a love triangle in which all the protagonists were white. She never published the book or any other works.

Later life edit

Larsen returned to New York in 1937, when her divorce had been completed. She was given a generous alimony in the divorce, which gave her the financial security she needed until Imes's death in 1941.[18] Struggling with depression, Larsen stopped writing. After her ex-husband's death, Larsen returned to nursing and became an administrator. She disappeared from literary circles. She lived on the Lower East Side and did not venture to Harlem.[19]

Many of her old acquaintances speculated that she, like some of the characters in her fiction, had crossed the color line to "pass" into the white community. Biographer George Hutchinson has demonstrated in his 2006 work that she remained in New York, working as a nurse.

Some literary scholars have engaged in speculation and interpretation of Larsen's decision to return to nursing, viewing her decision to take time off from writing as "an act of self-burial, or a 'retreat' motivated by a lack of courage and dedication."[18] What they overlooked is that during that time period, it was difficult for a woman of color to find a stable job that would also provide financial stability. For Larsen, nursing was a "labor market that welcomed an African American as a domestic servant".[18] Nursing had been something that came naturally to Larsen as it was "one respectable option for support during the process of learning about the work."[18] During her work as a nurse, Larsen was noticed by Adah Thoms, an African-American nurse who co-founded the National Association of Colored Graduate Nurses. Thoms had seen potential in Larsen's nursing career and helped strengthen Larsen's skills. When Larsen graduated in 1915, it was Adah Thoms who had made arrangements for Larsen to work at Tuskegee Institute's hospital.

Larsen draws from her medical background in Passing to create the character of Brian, a doctor and husband of the main character. Larsen describes Brian as being ambivalent about his work in the medical field. Brian's character may also be partially modeled on Larsen's husband Elmer Imes, a physicist. After Imes divorced Larsen, he was closely associated with Ethel Gilbert, Fisk Director of public relations and manager of the Fisk Jubilee Singers, although it is unclear if the two married.[20][21]

Larsen died in her Brooklyn apartment in 1964, at the age of 72.[22]

Legacy edit

In 2018, The New York Times published a belated obituary for her.[23] She was inducted into the Chicago Literary Hall of Fame in 2022.[24]

Nella Larsen was an acclaimed novelist, who wrote stories in the midst on the Harlem Renaissance. Larsen is most known for her two novels, Quicksand and Passing; these two pieces of work got much recognition with positive reviews. Many believed that Larsen was a rising star as an African American novelist, until she soon after left Harlem, her fame, and writing behind.[25]

Larsen is often compared to other authors who also wrote about cultural and racial conflict such as Claude Mckay and Jean Toomer.

Nella Larsen's works are viewed as strong pieces that well represent mixed-race individuals and the struggles with identity that some inevitably face.[26]

There have been some arguments that Larsen’s work did not well represent the "New Negro" movement because of the main characters in her novels being confused and struggling with their race. However, others argue that her work was a raw and important representation of how life was for many people, especially women, during the Harlem Renaissance.

Larsen's novel Passing was adapted as a 2021 film of the same name by Rebecca Hall.[27]

Works edit

1928: Quicksand edit

Helga Crane is a fictional character loosely based on Larsen's experiences in her early life. Crane is the lovely and refined mixed-race daughter of a Danish white mother and a West Indian black father. Her father died soon after she was born. Unable to feel comfortable with her maternal European-American relatives, Crane lives in various places in the United States and visits Denmark, searching for people among whom she feels at home. As writer Amina Gautier points out, "in a mere 135 pages, Larsen details five different geographical spaces and each space Helga Crane moves to or through alludes to a different stage in her emotional and psychological growth."[28]

Nella Larsen's early life is similar to Helga's in that she was distant from the African-American community, including her African-American family members. Larsen and Helga did not have father figures. Both of their mothers decided to marry a white man with the hope of having a higher social status. Larsen wanted to learn more about her background so she continued to go to school during the Harlem Renaissance. Even though Larsen's early life parallels Helga's, in adulthood, their life choices end up being very different. Nella Larsen pursued a career in nursing while Helga married a preacher and stayed in a very unhappy marriage.[14]

In her travels, she encounters many of the communities that Larsen knew. For example, Crane teaches at Naxos, a Southern Negro boarding school (based on Tuskegee University), where she becomes dissatisfied with its philosophy. She criticizes a sermon by a white preacher, who advocates the segregation of blacks into separate schools and says their striving for social equality would lead blacks to become avaricious. Crane quits teaching and moves to Chicago. Her white maternal uncle, now married to a bigoted woman, shuns her. Crane moves to Harlem, New York, where she finds a refined but often hypocritical black middle class obsessed with the "race problem."

Taking her uncle's legacy, Crane visits her maternal aunt in Copenhagen. There she is treated as an attractive racial exotic.[17] Missing black people, she returns to New York City. Close to a mental breakdown, Crane happens onto a store-front revival and has a charismatic religious experience. After marrying the preacher who converted her, she moves with him to the rural Deep South. There she is disillusioned by the people's adherence to religion. In each of her moves, Crane fails to find fulfillment. She is looking for more than how to integrate her mixed ancestry. She expresses complex feelings about what she and her friends consider genetic differences between races.

The novel develops Crane's search for a marriage partner. As it opens, she has become engaged to marry a prominent Southern Negro man, whom she does not really love, but with whom she can gain social benefits. In Denmark she turns down the proposal of a famous white Danish artist for similar reasons, for lack of feeling. By the final chapters, Crane has married a black Southern preacher. The novel's close is deeply pessimistic. Crane had hoped to find sexual fulfillment in marriage and some success in helping the poor Southern blacks she lives among, but instead she has frequent pregnancies and suffering. Disillusioned with religion, her husband, and her life, Crane fantasizes about leaving her husband, but never does. "She sinks into a slough of disillusionment and indifference. She tries to fight her way back to her own world, but she is too weak, and circumstances are too strong."[29]

The critics were impressed with the novel.[17] They appreciated her more indirect take on important topics such as race, class, sexuality, and other issues important to the African-American community rather than the explicit or obvious take of other Harlem Renaissance writers.[14] For example, the New York Times reviewer found it "an articulate, sympathetic first novel" which demonstrated an understanding that "a novelist's business is primarily with individuals and not with classes."[29] The novel also won Larsen a bronze prize (second place) for literature in 1928 from the William E. Harmon Foundation.

1929: Passing edit

Larsen's novel Passing  begins with Irene receiving a mysterious letter from her childhood friend Clare, following their encounter at the Drayton Hotel, after twelve years with no communication. Irene and Clare lost contact with each other after the death of Clare's father Bob Kendry, when Clare was sent to live with her white aunts. Both Irene and Clare are of mixed African-European ancestry, with features that enable them to pass racially as white if they choose. Clare chose to pass into white society and married John Bellew, a white man who is a racist. Unlike Clare, Irene passes as white only on occasion for convenience, in order be served in a segregated restaurant, for example. Irene identifies as a black woman and married an African-American doctor named Brian; together they have two sons. After Irene and Clare reconnect, they become fascinated with the differences in their lives. One day Irene meets with Clare and Gertrude, another of their childhood African-American friends; during that meeting Mr. Bellew meets Irene and Gertrude. Bellew greets his wife with a racist pet name, although he doesn't know that she is partially black.

Irene becomes furious that Clare did not tell her husband about her full ancestry. Irene believes Clare has put herself in a dangerous situation by lying to a person who hates blacks. After meeting Clare's husband, Irene does not want anything more to do with Clare but still keeps in touch with her. Clare begins to join Irene and Brian for their events in Harlem, New York while her husband is traveling out of town. Because Irene has some jealousy of Clare, she begins to suspect her friend is having an affair with her husband Brian. The novel ends with John Bellew learning that Clare is of mixed race. At a party in Harlem, she falls out of a window from a high floor of a multi-story building, to her death, in ambiguous circumstances.[30] Larsen ends the novel without revealing if Clare committed suicide, if Irene or her husband pushed her, or if it was an accident.

The novel was well received by the few critics who reviewed it. Writer and scholar W. E. B. Du Bois hailed it as "one of the finest novels of the year."[31]

Some later critics described the novel as an example of the genre of the tragic mulatto, a common figure in early African-American literature after the American Civil War. In such works, it is usually a woman of mixed race who is portrayed as tragic, as she has difficulty marrying and finding a place to fit into society.[32] Others suggest that this novel complicates that plot by playing with the duality of the figures of Irene and Clare, who are of similar mixed-race background but have taken different paths in life. The novel also suggests attraction between them and erotic undertones in the two women's relationship.[33] Irene's husband is also portrayed as potentially bisexual, as if the characters are passing in their sexual as well as social identities. Some read the novel as one of repression. Others argue that through its attention to the way "passing" unhinges ideas of race, class, and gender, the novel opens spaces for the creation of new, self-generated identities.

Since the late 20th century, Passing has received renewed attention from scholars because of its close examination of racial and sexual ambiguities and liminal spaces.[33] It has achieved canonical status in many American universities.

Bibliography edit

Books edit

Short stories edit

  • "Freedom" (1926)
  • "The Wrong Man" (1926)
  • "Playtime: Three Scandinavian Games", The Brownies' Book, 1 (June 1920): 191–192.
  • "Playtime: Danish Fun", The Brownies' Book, 1 (July 1920): 219.
  • "Correspondence", Opportunity, 4 (September 1926): 295.
  • "Review of Black Spade," Opportunity, 7 (January 1929): 24.
  • "Sanctuary", Forum, 83 (January 1930): 15–18.
  • "The Author's Explanation", Forum, Supplement 4, 83 (April 1930): 41–42.[34]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Bone, Martyn (2011), "Nella Larsen", in The Encyclopedia of Twentieth-Century Fiction, Wiley-Blackwell, pp. 658–659.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Pinckney, Darryl, "Shadows" (review of In Search of Nella Larsen: A Biography of the Color Line, by George Hutchinson), Nation 283, no. 3 (July 17, 2006), pp. 26–28.
  3. ^ a b Hutchinson, George (2006), In Search of Nella Larsen: A Biography of the Color Line, Harvard University Press, pp. 19–20.
  4. ^ Hutchinson (2006), pp. 15–16.
  5. ^ a b Sachi Nakachi, Mixed-Race Identity Politics in Nella Larsen and Winnifred Eaton (Onoto Watanna), doctoral dissertation Ohio University, p. 14. September 30, 2007, at the Wayback Machine. Accessed October 27, 2006.
  6. ^ a b Hutchinson (2006), p. 6.
  7. ^ Busby, Margaret (ed.), "Nella Larsen", in Daughters of Africa, London: Vintage, 1993, p. 200.
  8. ^ Williams, Yolanda. Encyclopedia of African American Women Writers. pp. 351–352.
  9. ^ Hutchinson (2006), p. 7.
  10. ^ a b c Hutchinson (2006), pp. 8–9.
  11. ^ Henry Louis Gates, Nellie Y. McKay (eds), The Norton Anthology of African American Literature, 2004, p. 1085.
  12. ^ Hutchinson (2006), p. 9.
  13. ^ J. Diesman, "Sanctuary", Northern Kentucky University. November 2, 2005, at the Wayback Machine
  14. ^ a b c Larson, Kelli A. (October 30, 2007). "Surviving the Taint of Plagiarism: Nella Larsen's 'Sanctuary' and Sheila Kaye-Smith's 'Mrs. Adis'". Journal of Modern Literature. 30 (4): 82–104. doi:10.2979/JML.2007.30.4.82. ISSN 1529-1464. S2CID 162216389.
  15. ^ Pearce, H. (2003), "Mrs Adis & Sanctuary", The Gleam: Journal of the Sheila Kaye-Smith Society, No. 16.
  16. ^ Hathaway, Rosemary V., "‘Almost Folklore’: The Legend That Killed Nella Larsen's Literary Career,” The Journal of American Folklore, 130, no. 517 (Summer 2017), pp. 255–275.
  17. ^ a b c Wertheim, Bonnie (March 8, 2018). "Nella Larsen Wrestled With Race and Sexuality in the Harlem Renaissance". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved January 17, 2019.
  18. ^ a b c d D'Antonio, Patricia (2010). American Nursing: A History of Knowledge, Authority, and the Meaning of Work. Johns Hopkins University: Johns Hopkins University Press. p. 3. ISBN 978-0801895654.
  19. ^ Pinckney, p. 30.
  20. ^ "Elmer Samuel Imes | Encyclopedia.com". www.encyclopedia.com. Retrieved April 14, 2020.
  21. ^ "American Writers, Supplement XVIII - PDF Free Download". epdf.pub. Retrieved April 14, 2020.
  22. ^ McDonald, C. Ann (2000). "Nella Larsen (1891–1964)". In Champion, Laurie (ed.). American Women Writers, 1900–1945: A Bio-Bibliographical Critical Sourcebook. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press. pp. 182–191. ISBN 0-313-30943-4. Retrieved July 7, 2010.
  23. ^ Wertheim, Bonnie (March 8, 2018). "Nella Larsen (1891-1964)". The New York Times.
  24. ^ Hutchinson, George (2022). "Nella Larsen". Chicago Literary Hall of Fame. Retrieved February 9, 2024.
  25. ^ Wall, Cheryl A. (1986). "Passing for what? Aspects of Identity in Nella Larsen's Novels". Black American Literature Forum. 20 (1/2): 97–111. doi:10.2307/2904554. ISSN 0148-6179. JSTOR 2904554.
  26. ^ "Passing in Race – The Peopling of New York City". eportfolios.macaulay.cuny.edu. April 10, 2016. Retrieved May 21, 2019.
  27. ^ Wilkinson, Alissa (November 10, 2021). "How Netflix's adaptation of Passing reflects the novel's time — and ours". Vox. Retrieved November 10, 2021.
  28. ^ Gautier, Amina, [1], “Nella Larsen’s Chicago,” Chicago Public Library Blog, April 3, 2015. September 27, 2015, at the Wayback Machine
  29. ^ a b "A Mulatto Girl” [a review of Quicksand by Nella Larsen], The New York Times Book Review, April 28, 1928, pp. 16–17.
  30. ^ Larsen, Nella (2007). Passing. New York: W.W. Norton & Company.
  31. ^ Du Bois, W. E. B. (1929), "Passing", in The Crisis 36, no. 7. Reprinted in Larson, Nella. Passing (2007), ed. by Carla Kaplan. New York: W. W. Norton & Company, p. 85.
  32. ^ Pilgrim, David (2000). "The Tragic Mulatto Myth". Jim Crow: Museum of Racist Memorabilia. Ferris State University. Retrieved June 26, 2012.
  33. ^ a b Robert Aldrich; Garry Wotherspoon (2001). Who's who in Gay and Lesbian History: From Antiquity to World War II. Psychology Press. pp. 255–. ISBN 978-0-415-15982-1.
  34. ^ "Nella Larsen", Selected Women Writers of the Harlem Renaissance: A Resource Guide, Northern Kentucky University, listing of short stories; accessed February 15, 2012.

References edit

  • Hutchinson, George (2006), In Search of Nella Larsen: A Biography of the Color Line, Harvard University Press.
  • Pearce, H. (2003), "Mrs Adis & Sanctuary", The Gleam: Journal of the Sheila Kaye-Smith Society, No. 16.
  • Pinckney, Darryl, "Shadows", The Nation, July 17/24, 2006, pp. 26–30. Review: Hutchinson's In Search of Nella Larsen: A Biography of the Color Line.
  • Robert Aldrich; Garry Wotherspoon, eds. (2002). Who's Who in Gay and Lesbian History from Antiquity to World War II. London: Routledge. ISBN 0-415-15983-0.

Further reading edit

  • Clark Barwick, "A History of Passing", South Atlantic Review 84.2–3 (2019): 24–54.
  • Thadious M. Davis (1994), Nella Larsen, Novelist of the Harlem Renaissance: A Woman's Life Unveiled (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press).
  • George Hutchinson, In Search of Nella Larsen: A Biography of the Color Line (Cambridge, Massachusetts; London, England: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2006).
  • Deborah E. McDowell, "Introduction", in Deborah E. McDowell (ed.), Quicksand and Passing: Nella Larsen (New Brunswick, N.J.: Rutgers University Press, 1986), ix–xxxv.
  • Martha J. Cutter, "Sliding Significations: Passing as a Narrative and Textual Strategy in Nella Larsen's Fiction", in Elaine Ginsberg (ed.), Passing and the Fictions of Identity, Duke University Press, 1996, pp. 75–100.
  • Nikki Hall, "Passing, Present, Future: The Intersectional Prescience of Nella Larsen's 1929 Classic", in Bitch magazine (Re)Vision issue, Winter 2015.
  • Sheila Kaye-Smith (1956), All the Books of My Life, London: Cassell, 1956.
  • Charles R. Larson (1993), Invisible Darkness: Jean Toomer and Nella Larsen.
  • Bonnie Wertheim, "Nella Larsen, 1891–1964", The New York Times, March 8, 2018.

External links edit

  •   Works related to Nella Larsen at Wikisource
  • Works by Nella Larsen at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Quicksand, scanned original edition at Hathi Trust
  • Passing at the Internet Archive (scanned book original edition)
  • "Nella Larsen", links, secondary bibliography, Washington State University

nella, larsen, nellallitea, nella, larsen, born, nellie, walker, april, 1891, march, 1964, american, novelist, working, nurse, librarian, published, novels, quicksand, 1928, passing, 1929, short, stories, though, literary, output, scant, earned, recognition, c. Nellallitea Nella Larsen born Nellie Walker April 13 1891 March 30 1964 was an American novelist Working as a nurse and a librarian she published two novels Quicksand 1928 and Passing 1929 and a few short stories Though her literary output was scant she earned recognition by her contemporaries Nella LarsenLarsen in 1928BornNellie Walker 1891 04 13 April 13 1891Chicago Illinois U S DiedMarch 30 1964 1964 03 30 aged 72 New York City U S Other namesNellye LarsonNellie LarsenNella Larsen ImesEducationFisk UniversityUniversity of CopenhagenLincoln HospitalNew York Public LibraryOccupationsNovelistlibrariannurseNotable workQuicksand 1928 Passing 1929 MovementHarlem RenaissanceSpouseElmer Imes m 1919 div 1933 wbr AwardsGuggenheim FellowshipA revival of interest in her writing has occurred since the late 20th century when issues of racial and sexual identity have been studied Her works have been the subjects of numerous academic studies and she is now widely lauded as not only the premier novelist of the Harlem Renaissance but also an important figure in American modernism 1 Contents 1 Early life 2 Nursing career 3 Marriage and family 4 Librarian and literary career 5 Later life 6 Legacy 7 Works 7 1 1928 Quicksand 7 2 1929 Passing 8 Bibliography 8 1 Books 8 2 Short stories 9 Notes 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksEarly life editNella Larsen was born Nellie Walker in a poor district of south Chicago known as the Levee on April 13 1891 Her mother was Pederline Marie Hansen a Danish immigrant born 1868 in Brahetrolleborg parish on the island of Fyn Funen Her mother who went by Mary Larsen sometimes misspelled Larson in the U S worked as a seamstress and domestic worker in Chicago She died in 1951 in Santa Monica Los Angeles County 2 Her father was Peter Walker believed to be a mixed race Afro Caribbean immigrant from the Danish West Indies He was probably a descendant on his paternal side of Henry or George Walker white men from Albany New York who were known to have settled in the Danish West Indies in about 1840 3 In that Danish colonial society racial lines were more fluid than in the former slave states of the United States Walker may never have identified as Negro 3 He soon disappeared from the lives of Nella and her mother she said he had died when she was very young At this time Chicago was filled with immigrants but the Great Migration of blacks from the South had not begun Near the end of Walker s childhood the black population of the city was 1 3 in 1890 and 2 in 1910 4 Marie married again to Peter Larsen aka Peter Larson b 1867 a fellow Danish immigrant In 1892 the couple had a daughter Anna Elizabeth also known as Lizzie married name Gardner 2 Nellie took her stepfather s surname sometimes using versions spelled Nellye Larson and Nellie Larsen before settling finally on Nella Larsen 5 The mixed family moved west to a mostly white neighborhood of German and Scandinavian immigrants but encountered discrimination because of Nella When Nella was eight years old they moved a few blocks back east The American author and critic Darryl Pinckney wrote of her anomalous situation as a member of a white immigrant family she Larsen had no entree into the world of the blues or of the black church If she could never be white like her mother and sister neither could she ever be black in quite the same way that Langston Hughes and his characters were black Hers was a netherworld unrecognizable historically and too painful to dredge up 2 From 1895 to 1898 Larsen visited Denmark with her mother and her half sister While she was unusual in Denmark because of being of mixed race she had some good memories from that time including playing Danish children s games which she later wrote about in English After returning to Chicago in 1898 she attended a large public school At the same time as the migration of Southern blacks increased to the city so had European immigration Racial segregation and tensions had increased in the immigrant neighborhoods where both groups competed for jobs and housing Her mother believed that education could give Larsen an opportunity and supported her in attending Fisk University a historically black university in Nashville Tennessee A student there in 1907 08 for the first time Larsen was living within an African American community but she was still separated by her own background and life experiences from most of the students who were primarily from the South with most descended from former slaves Biographer George B Hutchinson found that Larsen was expelled for some violation of Fisk s strict dress or conduct codes for women 6 Larsen went on her own to Denmark where she lived for a total of three years between 1909 and 1912 and attended the University of Copenhagen 7 After returning to the United States she continued to struggle to find a place where she could belong 2 Nursing career editIn 1914 Larsen enrolled in the nursing school at New York City s Lincoln Hospital and Nursing Home The institution was founded in the 19th century in Manhattan as a nursing home to serve black people but the hospital elements had grown in importance The total operation had been relocated to a newly constructed campus in the South Bronx At the time the hospital patients were primarily white the nursing home patients were primarily black the doctors were white males and the nurses and nursing students were black females 6 As Pinckney writes No matter what situation Larsen found herself in racial irony of one kind or another invariably wrapped itself around her 2 Upon graduating in 1915 Larsen went South to work at the Tuskegee Institute in Tuskegee Alabama where she soon became head nurse at its John A Andrew Memorial Hospital and training school 8 While at Tuskegee she was introduced to Booker T Washington s model of education and became disillusioned with it As it was combined with poor working conditions for nurses at Tuskegee Larsen decided to leave after a year or so citation needed She returned to New York in 1916 where she worked for two years as a nurse at Lincoln Hospital After earning the second highest score on a civil service exam Larsen was hired by the city Bureau of Public Health as a nurse She worked for them in the Bronx through the 1918 flu pandemic in mostly white neighborhoods and with white colleagues Afterwards she continued with the city as a nurse 9 Marriage and family editIn 1919 Larsen married Elmer Imes a prominent physicist he was the second African American to earn a PhD in physics After her marriage she sometimes used the name Nella Larsen Imes in her writing A year after her marriage she published her first short stories The couple moved to Harlem in the 1920s where their marriage and life together had contradictions of class As Pinckney writes By virtue of her marriage she was a member of Harlem s black professional class many of them people of color with partially European ancestry She and her husband knew the NAACP leadership W E B Du Bois Walter White James Weldon Johnson However because of her low birth and mixed parentage and because she did not have a college degree Larsen was alienated from the black middle class whose members emphasized college and family ties and black fraternities and sororities 2 Her mixed racial ancestry was not itself unusual in the black middle class But many of these individuals such as Langston Hughes had more distant European ancestors He and others formed an elite of mixed race or people of color some of whom had ancestors who had been free people of color well before the American Civil War This had given many families an advantage in establishing themselves and gaining educations in the North In the 1920s most African Americans in Harlem were exploring and emphasizing their black heritage Imes s scientific studies and achievement placed him in a different class than Larsen The Imes couple had difficulties by the late 1920s when he had an affair with a white woman at Fisk University where he was a professor Imes and Larsen would divorce in 1933 2 5 Librarian and literary career edit nbsp Seward Park Library where Larsen workedIn 1921 Larsen worked nights and weekends as a volunteer with librarian Ernestine Rose to help prepare for the first exhibit of Negro art at the New York Public Library NYPL Encouraged by Rose she became the first black woman to graduate from the NYPL Library School It was run by Columbia University and opened the way for integration of library staff 10 Larsen passed her certification exam in 1923 She worked her first year as a librarian at the Seward Park Branch on the Lower East Side which was predominantly Jewish There she had strong support from her white supervisor Alice Keats O Connor as she had from Rose They and another branch supervisor where she worked supported Larsen and helped integrate the staff of the branches 10 Larsen transferred to the Harlem branch as she was interested in the cultural excitement in the African American neighborhood a destination for migrants from across the country 10 In October 1925 Larsen took a sabbatical from her job for health reasons and began to write her first novel 11 In 1926 having made friends with important figures in the Negro Awakening which became known as the Harlem Renaissance Larsen gave up her work as a librarian citation needed She became a writer active in Harlem s interracial literary and arts community where she became friends with Carl Van Vechten a white photographer and writer 12 In 1928 Larsen published Quicksand a largely autobiographical novel It received significant critical acclaim if not great financial success citation needed In 1929 she published Passing her second novel which was also critically successful It dealt with issues of two mixed race African American women who were childhood friends and had taken different paths of racial identification and marriage One identified as black and married a black doctor the other passed as white and married a white man without revealing her African ancestry The book explored their experiences of coming together again as adults citation needed In 1930 Larsen published Sanctuary a short story for which she was accused of plagiarism 13 Sanctuary was said to resemble the British writer Sheila Kaye Smith s short story Mrs Adis first published in the United Kingdom in 1919 Kaye Smith wrote on rural themes and was very popular in the US Some critics thought the basic plot of Sanctuary and some of the descriptions and dialogue were virtually identical to Kaye Smith s work 14 The scholar H Pearce has disputed this assessment writing that compared to Kaye Smith s tale Sanctuary is longer better written and more explicitly political specifically around issues of race rather than class as in Mrs Adis 15 Pearce thinks that Larsen reworked and updated the tale into a modern American black context Pearce also notes that in Kaye Smith s 1956 book All the Books of My Life the author said she had based Mrs Adis on a 17th century story by St Francis de Sales Catholic bishop of Geneva It is unknown whether she knew of the Larsen controversy in the United States Larsen herself said the story came to her as almost folk lore recounted to her by a patient when she was a nurse 16 No plagiarism charges were proved Larsen received a Guggenheim Fellowship even in the aftermath of the controversy worth roughly 2 500 at the time and was the first African American woman to do so 17 She used it to travel to Europe for several years spending time in Mallorca and Paris where she worked on a novel about a love triangle in which all the protagonists were white She never published the book or any other works Later life editLarsen returned to New York in 1937 when her divorce had been completed She was given a generous alimony in the divorce which gave her the financial security she needed until Imes s death in 1941 18 Struggling with depression Larsen stopped writing After her ex husband s death Larsen returned to nursing and became an administrator She disappeared from literary circles She lived on the Lower East Side and did not venture to Harlem 19 Many of her old acquaintances speculated that she like some of the characters in her fiction had crossed the color line to pass into the white community Biographer George Hutchinson has demonstrated in his 2006 work that she remained in New York working as a nurse Some literary scholars have engaged in speculation and interpretation of Larsen s decision to return to nursing viewing her decision to take time off from writing as an act of self burial or a retreat motivated by a lack of courage and dedication 18 What they overlooked is that during that time period it was difficult for a woman of color to find a stable job that would also provide financial stability For Larsen nursing was a labor market that welcomed an African American as a domestic servant 18 Nursing had been something that came naturally to Larsen as it was one respectable option for support during the process of learning about the work 18 During her work as a nurse Larsen was noticed by Adah Thoms an African American nurse who co founded the National Association of Colored Graduate Nurses Thoms had seen potential in Larsen s nursing career and helped strengthen Larsen s skills When Larsen graduated in 1915 it was Adah Thoms who had made arrangements for Larsen to work at Tuskegee Institute s hospital Larsen draws from her medical background in Passing to create the character of Brian a doctor and husband of the main character Larsen describes Brian as being ambivalent about his work in the medical field Brian s character may also be partially modeled on Larsen s husband Elmer Imes a physicist After Imes divorced Larsen he was closely associated with Ethel Gilbert Fisk Director of public relations and manager of the Fisk Jubilee Singers although it is unclear if the two married 20 21 Larsen died in her Brooklyn apartment in 1964 at the age of 72 22 Legacy editIn 2018 The New York Times published a belated obituary for her 23 She was inducted into the Chicago Literary Hall of Fame in 2022 24 Nella Larsen was an acclaimed novelist who wrote stories in the midst on the Harlem Renaissance Larsen is most known for her two novels Quicksand and Passing these two pieces of work got much recognition with positive reviews Many believed that Larsen was a rising star as an African American novelist until she soon after left Harlem her fame and writing behind 25 Larsen is often compared to other authors who also wrote about cultural and racial conflict such as Claude Mckay and Jean Toomer Nella Larsen s works are viewed as strong pieces that well represent mixed race individuals and the struggles with identity that some inevitably face 26 There have been some arguments that Larsen s work did not well represent the New Negro movement because of the main characters in her novels being confused and struggling with their race However others argue that her work was a raw and important representation of how life was for many people especially women during the Harlem Renaissance Larsen s novel Passing was adapted as a 2021 film of the same name by Rebecca Hall 27 Works editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message 1928 Quicksand edit Main article Quicksand Nella Larsen novel Helga Crane is a fictional character loosely based on Larsen s experiences in her early life Crane is the lovely and refined mixed race daughter of a Danish white mother and a West Indian black father Her father died soon after she was born Unable to feel comfortable with her maternal European American relatives Crane lives in various places in the United States and visits Denmark searching for people among whom she feels at home As writer Amina Gautier points out in a mere 135 pages Larsen details five different geographical spaces and each space Helga Crane moves to or through alludes to a different stage in her emotional and psychological growth 28 Nella Larsen s early life is similar to Helga s in that she was distant from the African American community including her African American family members Larsen and Helga did not have father figures Both of their mothers decided to marry a white man with the hope of having a higher social status Larsen wanted to learn more about her background so she continued to go to school during the Harlem Renaissance Even though Larsen s early life parallels Helga s in adulthood their life choices end up being very different Nella Larsen pursued a career in nursing while Helga married a preacher and stayed in a very unhappy marriage 14 In her travels she encounters many of the communities that Larsen knew For example Crane teaches at Naxos a Southern Negro boarding school based on Tuskegee University where she becomes dissatisfied with its philosophy She criticizes a sermon by a white preacher who advocates the segregation of blacks into separate schools and says their striving for social equality would lead blacks to become avaricious Crane quits teaching and moves to Chicago Her white maternal uncle now married to a bigoted woman shuns her Crane moves to Harlem New York where she finds a refined but often hypocritical black middle class obsessed with the race problem Taking her uncle s legacy Crane visits her maternal aunt in Copenhagen There she is treated as an attractive racial exotic 17 Missing black people she returns to New York City Close to a mental breakdown Crane happens onto a store front revival and has a charismatic religious experience After marrying the preacher who converted her she moves with him to the rural Deep South There she is disillusioned by the people s adherence to religion In each of her moves Crane fails to find fulfillment She is looking for more than how to integrate her mixed ancestry She expresses complex feelings about what she and her friends consider genetic differences between races The novel develops Crane s search for a marriage partner As it opens she has become engaged to marry a prominent Southern Negro man whom she does not really love but with whom she can gain social benefits In Denmark she turns down the proposal of a famous white Danish artist for similar reasons for lack of feeling By the final chapters Crane has married a black Southern preacher The novel s close is deeply pessimistic Crane had hoped to find sexual fulfillment in marriage and some success in helping the poor Southern blacks she lives among but instead she has frequent pregnancies and suffering Disillusioned with religion her husband and her life Crane fantasizes about leaving her husband but never does She sinks into a slough of disillusionment and indifference She tries to fight her way back to her own world but she is too weak and circumstances are too strong 29 The critics were impressed with the novel 17 They appreciated her more indirect take on important topics such as race class sexuality and other issues important to the African American community rather than the explicit or obvious take of other Harlem Renaissance writers 14 For example the New York Times reviewer found it an articulate sympathetic first novel which demonstrated an understanding that a novelist s business is primarily with individuals and not with classes 29 The novel also won Larsen a bronze prize second place for literature in 1928 from the William E Harmon Foundation 1929 Passing edit Main article Passing novel Larsen s novel Passing begins with Irene receiving a mysterious letter from her childhood friend Clare following their encounter at the Drayton Hotel after twelve years with no communication Irene and Clare lost contact with each other after the death of Clare s father Bob Kendry when Clare was sent to live with her white aunts Both Irene and Clare are of mixed African European ancestry with features that enable them to pass racially as white if they choose Clare chose to pass into white society and married John Bellew a white man who is a racist Unlike Clare Irene passes as white only on occasion for convenience in order be served in a segregated restaurant for example Irene identifies as a black woman and married an African American doctor named Brian together they have two sons After Irene and Clare reconnect they become fascinated with the differences in their lives One day Irene meets with Clare and Gertrude another of their childhood African American friends during that meeting Mr Bellew meets Irene and Gertrude Bellew greets his wife with a racist pet name although he doesn t know that she is partially black Irene becomes furious that Clare did not tell her husband about her full ancestry Irene believes Clare has put herself in a dangerous situation by lying to a person who hates blacks After meeting Clare s husband Irene does not want anything more to do with Clare but still keeps in touch with her Clare begins to join Irene and Brian for their events in Harlem New York while her husband is traveling out of town Because Irene has some jealousy of Clare she begins to suspect her friend is having an affair with her husband Brian The novel ends with John Bellew learning that Clare is of mixed race At a party in Harlem she falls out of a window from a high floor of a multi story building to her death in ambiguous circumstances 30 Larsen ends the novel without revealing if Clare committed suicide if Irene or her husband pushed her or if it was an accident The novel was well received by the few critics who reviewed it Writer and scholar W E B Du Bois hailed it as one of the finest novels of the year 31 Some later critics described the novel as an example of the genre of the tragic mulatto a common figure in early African American literature after the American Civil War In such works it is usually a woman of mixed race who is portrayed as tragic as she has difficulty marrying and finding a place to fit into society 32 Others suggest that this novel complicates that plot by playing with the duality of the figures of Irene and Clare who are of similar mixed race background but have taken different paths in life The novel also suggests attraction between them and erotic undertones in the two women s relationship 33 Irene s husband is also portrayed as potentially bisexual as if the characters are passing in their sexual as well as social identities Some read the novel as one of repression Others argue that through its attention to the way passing unhinges ideas of race class and gender the novel opens spaces for the creation of new self generated identities Since the late 20th century Passing has received renewed attention from scholars because of its close examination of racial and sexual ambiguities and liminal spaces 33 It has achieved canonical status in many American universities Bibliography editBooks edit Quicksand 1928 Passing 1929 Short stories edit Freedom 1926 The Wrong Man 1926 Playtime Three Scandinavian Games The Brownies Book 1 June 1920 191 192 Playtime Danish Fun The Brownies Book 1 July 1920 219 Correspondence Opportunity 4 September 1926 295 Review of Black Spade Opportunity 7 January 1929 24 Sanctuary Forum 83 January 1930 15 18 The Author s Explanation Forum Supplement 4 83 April 1930 41 42 34 Notes edit Bone Martyn 2011 Nella Larsen in The Encyclopedia of Twentieth Century Fiction Wiley Blackwell pp 658 659 a b c d e f g Pinckney Darryl Shadows review of In Search of Nella Larsen A Biography of the Color Line by George Hutchinson Nation 283 no 3 July 17 2006 pp 26 28 a b Hutchinson George 2006 In Search of Nella Larsen A Biography of the Color Line Harvard University Press pp 19 20 Hutchinson 2006 pp 15 16 a b Sachi Nakachi Mixed Race Identity Politics in Nella Larsen and Winnifred Eaton Onoto Watanna doctoral dissertation Ohio University p 14 Archived September 30 2007 at the Wayback Machine Accessed October 27 2006 a b Hutchinson 2006 p 6 Busby Margaret ed Nella Larsen in Daughters of Africa London Vintage 1993 p 200 Williams Yolanda Encyclopedia of African American Women Writers pp 351 352 Hutchinson 2006 p 7 a b c Hutchinson 2006 pp 8 9 Henry Louis Gates Nellie Y McKay eds The Norton Anthology of African American Literature 2004 p 1085 Hutchinson 2006 p 9 J Diesman Sanctuary Northern Kentucky University Archived November 2 2005 at the Wayback Machine a b c Larson Kelli A October 30 2007 Surviving the Taint of Plagiarism Nella Larsen s Sanctuary and Sheila Kaye Smith s Mrs Adis Journal of Modern Literature 30 4 82 104 doi 10 2979 JML 2007 30 4 82 ISSN 1529 1464 S2CID 162216389 Pearce H 2003 Mrs Adis amp Sanctuary The Gleam Journal of the Sheila Kaye Smith Society No 16 Hathaway Rosemary V Almost Folklore The Legend That Killed Nella Larsen s Literary Career The Journal of American Folklore 130 no 517 Summer 2017 pp 255 275 a b c Wertheim Bonnie March 8 2018 Nella Larsen Wrestled With Race and Sexuality in the Harlem Renaissance The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved January 17 2019 a b c d D Antonio Patricia 2010 American Nursing A History of Knowledge Authority and the Meaning of Work Johns Hopkins University Johns Hopkins University Press p 3 ISBN 978 0801895654 Pinckney p 30 Elmer Samuel Imes Encyclopedia com www encyclopedia com Retrieved April 14 2020 American Writers Supplement XVIII PDF Free Download epdf pub Retrieved April 14 2020 McDonald C Ann 2000 Nella Larsen 1891 1964 In Champion Laurie ed American Women Writers 1900 1945 A Bio Bibliographical Critical Sourcebook Westport CT Greenwood Press pp 182 191 ISBN 0 313 30943 4 Retrieved July 7 2010 Wertheim Bonnie March 8 2018 Nella Larsen 1891 1964 The New York Times Hutchinson George 2022 Nella Larsen Chicago Literary Hall of Fame Retrieved February 9 2024 Wall Cheryl A 1986 Passing for what Aspects of Identity in Nella Larsen s Novels Black American Literature Forum 20 1 2 97 111 doi 10 2307 2904554 ISSN 0148 6179 JSTOR 2904554 Passing in Race The Peopling of New York City eportfolios macaulay cuny edu April 10 2016 Retrieved May 21 2019 Wilkinson Alissa November 10 2021 How Netflix s adaptation of Passing reflects the novel s time and ours Vox Retrieved November 10 2021 Gautier Amina 1 Nella Larsen s Chicago Chicago Public Library Blog April 3 2015 Archived September 27 2015 at the Wayback Machine a b A Mulatto Girl a review of Quicksand by Nella Larsen The New York Times Book Review April 28 1928 pp 16 17 Larsen Nella 2007 Passing New York W W Norton amp Company Du Bois W E B 1929 Passing in The Crisis 36 no 7 Reprinted in Larson Nella Passing 2007 ed by Carla Kaplan New York W W Norton amp Company p 85 Pilgrim David 2000 The Tragic Mulatto Myth Jim Crow Museum of Racist Memorabilia Ferris State University Retrieved June 26 2012 a b Robert Aldrich Garry Wotherspoon 2001 Who s who in Gay and Lesbian History From Antiquity to World War II Psychology Press pp 255 ISBN 978 0 415 15982 1 Nella Larsen Selected Women Writers of the Harlem Renaissance A Resource Guide Northern Kentucky University listing of short stories accessed February 15 2012 References editHutchinson George 2006 In Search of Nella Larsen A Biography of the Color Line Harvard University Press Pearce H 2003 Mrs Adis amp Sanctuary The Gleam Journal of the Sheila Kaye Smith Society No 16 Pinckney Darryl Shadows The Nation July 17 24 2006 pp 26 30 Review Hutchinson s In Search of Nella Larsen A Biography of the Color Line Robert Aldrich Garry Wotherspoon eds 2002 Who s Who in Gay and Lesbian History from Antiquity to World War II London Routledge ISBN 0 415 15983 0 Further reading editClark Barwick A History of Passing South Atlantic Review 84 2 3 2019 24 54 Thadious M Davis 1994 Nella Larsen Novelist of the Harlem Renaissance A Woman s Life Unveiled Baton Rouge Louisiana State University Press George Hutchinson In Search of Nella Larsen A Biography of the Color Line Cambridge Massachusetts London England The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press 2006 Deborah E McDowell Introduction in Deborah E McDowell ed Quicksand and Passing Nella Larsen New Brunswick N J Rutgers University Press 1986 ix xxxv Martha J Cutter Sliding Significations Passing as a Narrative and Textual Strategy in Nella Larsen s Fiction in Elaine Ginsberg ed Passing and the Fictions of Identity Duke University Press 1996 pp 75 100 Nikki Hall Passing Present Future The Intersectional Prescience of Nella Larsen s 1929 Classic in Bitch magazine Re Vision issue Winter 2015 Sheila Kaye Smith 1956 All the Books of My Life London Cassell 1956 Charles R Larson 1993 Invisible Darkness Jean Toomer and Nella Larsen Bonnie Wertheim Nella Larsen 1891 1964 The New York Times March 8 2018 External links edit nbsp Biography portal nbsp United States portal nbsp New York City portal nbsp Works related to Nella Larsen at Wikisource Works by Nella Larsen at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Quicksand scanned original edition at Hathi Trust Passing at the Internet Archive scanned book original edition Nella Larsen links secondary bibliography Washington State University Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nella Larsen amp oldid 1207067707, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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