Thursday, April 13, 2017

African DIASPORA story: Nella Larsen


Nella Larsen acclaimed novelist from the Harlem Renaissance 



Mon, 1891-04-13


Nella Larsen was born on this date in 1891. She was an African American novelist of the Harlem Renaissance and a landmark figure in the Black women's literary tradition.
She was born Nellie Walker in Chicago. In 1909 Larsen left home to attend Fisk University. A year later she traveled to Denmark, and spent the next two years living with relatives and studying at the University of Copenhagen. Larsen studied nursing in New York, and in 1916 she returned south to Tuskegee Institute to become assistant superintendent of nurses.

Unhappy in the South, Larsen returned to New York and worked as a nurse and a children's librarian for the next ten years. In 1919 she married Dr. Elmer Imes, a prominent physicist. Her marriage brought her into the upper classes of New York's Black society, including many writers who were already active in Harlem.

As a writer, Larsen's first two essays were on Danish children's games. In 1926, she began writing full-time. Larsen's two novels, Quicksand and Passing, were published in 1928 and 1929 and well received. A charge of plagiarism came that same year, over the short story Sanctuary that Larsen had published in January 1930. This was followed by the humiliation of her 1933 divorce, which stemmed from her husband's alleged affair. Newspapers covering the story falsely claimed that she had tried to commit suicide. Larsen did not, but she did close herself off from all contact with her former life. She moved to New York's lower East Side, where she lived alone and worked quietly as a nurse for the next thirty years.

Larsen was found dead in her apartment in 1964. Despite the obscurity at the end of her life, Larsen's reputation and writings have been resurrected. Contemporary critics now regard her as one of the most sophisticated and modern novelists to emerge from the Harlem Renaissance, and her two books are regarded as landmark examples of Black women's attempts to explain their complex identities.



Reference:
The Face of Our Past
Images of Black Women from Colonial America to the Present
Edited by Kathleen Thompson and Hilary Mac Austin
Copyright1999, Indiana University Press
ISBN 0-253-336535-X





Medicine Woman

"We all have the ability to bring back the knowledge that have been lost or taken by the Evils of others, we only need understand we have the power to step up to the plate doing what the Grandmothers/Grandfathers ask to regain this Ancient Knowledge/Wisdom...
Many times the road is hard, but we must do the same as those ancients who took the same walks to gain the same lessons...


There are no short cuts, no easy or simple ways..."

Cloud Walker

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