
Contents
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Reading the Prehistory of Racial Passing, 1740–1850 Reading the Prehistory of Racial Passing, 1740–1850
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Questioning Race: Passing, 1850–1930 Questioning Race: Passing, 1850–1930
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Passing in a “Postracial” World? Passing in a “Postracial” World?
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Conclusion: The Persistence of Passing Conclusion: The Persistence of Passing
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Notes Notes
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Bibliography Bibliography
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1 Why Passing Is (Still) Not Passé after More Than 250 Years: Sources from the Past and Present
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Published:February 2018
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Abstract
Some scholars argue that racial passing began in the mid- to late nineteenth century, reached its pinnacle in the early twentieth century, and then abated by the 1930s. This chapter substantiates, however, that as a word and a behavior, passing has a longer and more extensive chronology. By providing a broad historical overview of racial-passing texts, the chapter argues that the most radical ones play on the multivalent possibilities of this behavior, using passing as a mirror, as a sort of “dirty” glass that is held up to the reader. Instead of clarifying the meaning of whiteness or blackness, some of these texts ultimately confuse a stable reading of the meaning of race, revealing dialectical tensions that exist at the heart of identity categories themselves.
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