The House Behind the Cedars (Dover Literature: African American)
Description
Charles Chesnutt was perhaps the most influential African-American fiction writer during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. The House Behind the Cedars, his dramatic masterpiece, was crafted during the tumultuous post-Civil War era in the South, when many in white society feared the "evils" of interracial relationships. Boldly, with vivid detail and memorable characters, this novel explores the practice of "passing," as John and Rena Walden, two light-skinned African Americans, step over the color line to share in the American Dream.
Conceived by a novelist who himself had once considered "passing," The House Behind the Cedars continues as one of the bravest, most compelling, and most important explorations of racism in American fiction.
Other Books in Series
Brown Girl, Brownstones (Dover Literature: African American)
Darkwater: Voices from Within the Veil (Dover Literature: African American)
Passing (Dover Literature: African American)
The Poems of Phillis Wheatley: With Letters and a Memoir (Dover Literature: African American)
The Chinaberry Tree: A Novel of American Life (Dover Literature: African American)
Our Nig: Sketches from the Life of a Free Black (Dover Literature: African American)
The Blacker the Berry (Dover Literature: African American)
Women's Slave Narratives (Dover Literature: African American)
Quicksand (Dover Literature: African American)
Infants of the Spring (Dover Literature: African American)
Three Great African-American Novels: The Heroic Slave/Clotel/Our Nig (Dover Literature: African American)
Iola Leroy, Or, Shadows Uplifted (Dover Literature: African American)
Black No More: Being an Account of the Strange and Wonderful Workings of Science in the Land of the Free, A.D. 1933-1940 (Dover Literature: African American)
There Is Confusion (Dover Literature: African American)
