The Consequences of Crossing the Color Line: Identity and Racial Passing in Brit Bennett’s The Vanishing Half
The Consequences of Crossing the Color Line: Identity and Racial Passing in Brit Bennett’s The Vanishing Half
Author(s): Magdalena ŁapińskaSubject(s): American Literature
Published by: Wydział Filologiczny Uniwersytetu w Białymstoku
Keywords: identity; race; transgressions; African Americans; racial passing;
Summary/Abstract: The article explores the concept of identity and the notion of transgressing the color line in Brit Bennet t ’s The Vanishing Half. Racial passing, in which light-skinned African Americans lived their lives as white people, is a trope present in numerous African American novels, notably Nella Larsen’s Passing. Brit Bennett’s novel returns to the once-popular trope of transgressing the color line in the second half of the twentieth century in the United States. Although Bennett subverts the trope as no tragedy befalls those who cross the line of the racial divide, the novel presents how one’s race, circumstance, and choices shape not only one’s own identity but also how they impact the next generation. Through the return to the past, Bennett’s novel emphasizes the continued divide within American society. Based on the histor-ical and cultural backdrop of the United States, as well as through the application of affect theory, the article explores to what degree one’s race, choices, experienced violence, and society’s stereotypes and prejudice impact how characters feel, behave, and define themselves. The focal point of the analysis is the exploration of two generations of women from one family and the examination of how differently their racial identities have been shaped.
Journal: Crossroads. A Journal of English Studies
- Issue Year: 2024
- Issue No: 05 (44)
- Page Range: 66 - 83
- Page Count: 18
- Language: English