soundings soundings
Soundings,
Vol. 100, No. 2, 2017
Copyright © 2017
The Pennsylvania
State University,
University Park, PA
The Manner of Blackness
in Nella Larsen’s Passing
MICHAEL A. ISTVAN JR., TEXAS
STATE UNIVERSITY
Abstract
Commentators have suggested that Nella Larsen’s Passing
rejects the view that there is some sort of black essence. This
article challenges this reading. Since Irene is the most vocal
advocate of an essence in respect to which all blacks are
homogenous, much of the evidence for thinking that Passing
is skeptical about such an essence amounts to evidence for
not trusting Irene’s judgment in general, and for not trusting
her judgment on this matter in particular. My arguments,
then, will often involve explaining why Passing is not lead-
ing the reader to mistrust Irene’s judgment on this matter.
Now, what exactly is meant by a black essence is, explicitly
in this book, mysterious. Nevertheless, this article intends to
shed some light on how Passing understands the nature of this
something, this je ne sais quoi, peculiar to blacks. My tenta-
tive interpretation is that this something is an intangible and
indefinite manner of being that is neither a conscious choice
nor an inborn fact of biology, but rather a given of culture.
This article takes this, in effect, blackness manner to be, so
Passing seems to indicate, a function of one’s belief that one
is black in a milieu of pervasive anti-black prejudice. Passing
thus has something to offer those today who struggle to adju-
dicate between a pull towards essentialism and a pull towards
constructionism. What Passing emphasizes in this discussion
is the possibility that, in addition to biological and societal
influences, one’s mind state is a crucial ingredient to one’s
racial identity.
Keywords: Larsen, blackness, identity, race, essentialism, con-
structionism, performativity