Interpersonal relationships in accepted work by Nella Larsen are not included in Harlem Renaissance. This is a turning point for many African Americans. In this era, a large amount of literature was created especially for this group. For the first time, African Americans are said to be proud that they are themselves. This new consciousness and self-awareness are prominent in many literary works, but some writers began exploring the dark side of this movement, and literature focuses on the negative aspects of American racial relations.
Passing is a fictional work, but it is a true story about the world in which the author, Nella Larsen lives. Simply describing it as a novel about a black woman's whiteness will ignore the multiple levels of concern. Transmission is about the big cultural change that took place in the American society after the First World War. It is about the definition of concepts such as race and sex change, and the inseparable relationship between white and black. It is a dynamic meditation about anxiety between social obligations and individual freedom. It dramatically represents the impossibility of self-invention in a society where nuance and ambiguity are regarded as a fatal threat to social order. This novel is the prosecution of consumer culture and its dangers to the integrity of individuals. It reveals the power to change our desires and to ignore, and the length we get what we want. About hypocrisy and fear, secrets and betrayal
The novel and the second novel "Transfer" by Nella Larsen reflect the pursuit of acceptance of the author himself. "I can draw my own self from a wanderer, Hergaklan who has a good understanding of Nella Larsen's character," T. N. R. Rogers said in a preface to the novel. Larsen was born in Chicago in 1891. Her mother is Caucasian and her father is black. Her mother remarried a white Danish man who already had a 1 year old white girl when married. Larsen 's biographer Thadious M. Davis, Larsen was dispatched to live in a shelter, finally found a way to live with her relatives in Denmark, then returned to New York, where it became a literary movement of the Harlem Renaissance became. Outstanding respected voice of the 1920s and 1930s
Larsen, Nella (Nellie Marian Walker, Nellie Marian Larsen, Allen Semi) (1891-1964) Novelist, short story writer Nella Larsen is a major artist of Harlem in the Harlem Renaissance "New Black" era of the 1920s. It is one. In the 1930's she published only two novels and short stories in her short literary career, but she is a prominent contemporary contemporary, including a respected African American critic and scholar Web DuBois A respected, first-rate African-American woman. Guggenheim Scholarship. Larssen was born on April 13, 1891 by Nelly Marian Walker in Chicago, Peter Walker in West India and Immigration Marie Hansen Walker in Denmark. According to Larsen, her father died when she was 3 years old, and her mother later married Peter Larsen, a white railroad worker in Chicago. This and other guesses about the Larsen family and early childhood are not yet definitive. She studied 192