Passing
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In Nella Larsens novel, Passing, Irene Redfield and Clare Kendry can be considered as the protagonists. The novel concentrates on the issue of skin color and passing. Passing is when African-Americans with light skin pass as white in order to enjoy the privileges that white people enjoyed. Irene Redfield is a middle-class, light-skin African-American woman who regrets passing but occasionally passes as white. She is married to Brian a doctor who is too dark to pass. Irenes life is going along as usual when she runs into a childhood friend, Clare Kendry. Clare Kendry is also a light-skin African-American woman who passes for white. Even her own husband is oblivious of Clares African American blood. Irene passes not by adopting a white identity as Clare does, but by adopting white values. Throughout the novel Irene changes as she experiences life after her encounter with Clare.
Irene and her husband, Brian, live in Harlem with their two sons. Irene is proud of her African American background and only passes when she needs to in public places. Irene has an encounter with her childhood friend Clare at the Drayton Hotel, ironically Irene is passing as well because she is at this all white hotel. Clare tells Irene that after her fathers death, she left behind the black neighborhood of her youth and began passing for white, hiding her true identity from everyone, including her racist husband. Irene disapproves of Clare Kendrys passing by keeping the truth from her husband and discourages Clares desire to renew their friendship even though Irene can, and occasionally does, pass for white herself sometimes. Clare invites Irene for tea, where she meets Clares husband John Bellew, a racist white man who showed his hate towards white people in a very hostile manner. After this experience Irene is hurt and decides not to have anything to do with Clare Kendry. Clare visits Irene after she has not had any answer to the letters she has sent Irene. At this point Irene mostly takes Clare in out of pity. There Clare finds out about the dance that Irene is organizing and decides that she wants to attend the Harlem party. When Clare witnesses the vibrancy and energy of the community she left behind at the dance, her burning desire to come back and interact with her people threatens her identity and the possibility of John finding out about her racial background. Clare claims Irene as her link to blackness and the people she loves to be with, and in a hidden way Irene settles her desire for whiteness through Clare. Clare becomes Irenes connection to the white world. Irene is somewhat tired of Clares persistent presence and she also suspects that she and her husband are having an affair that she wishes John could find out about his wifes Harlem outings.
Irene begins to feel ambivalence about her African American heritage, and that ambivalence is associated with Clares presence in her life, as Irene wished, for