Campus Classic For each issue, we invite a professor to share an experience of teaching with a Penguin Classic.
"Nella Larsen’s Passing is a regular feature of my American and African American literature courses, because this sly, lyrical novel’s take on unexamined racial certainties and the ambiguities of desire never fails to delight and challenge readers. Recently, I taught the novel as a part of an upper-level course on 'Novels of the Roaring Twenties.' The students had already witnessed the transformation of James Gatz into Jay Gatsby, and they were fascinated by the resonances between this character and Clare Kendry, the 'vital glowing thing' who vacillates between black and white, destabilizes ideas about race, class, and desire, and reveals why so many Americans were fascinated by Harlem in the 1920s. Larsen’s novel prompts students to reconsider their own assumptions about the relationship between race and identity, and it rewards careful reading with unexpected revelations about the slipperiness of language and the complexities of sexuality." — Adam McKible, Associate Professor, Department of English, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, The City University of New York. |
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