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Belle da Costa Greene: Additional Resources

Select Resources on Belle da Costa Greene

Ardizzone, Heidi.Ìý.ÌýNew York: W.W. Norton & Co., 2007.

This book is the only book-length biography on Belle da Costa Greene. It examines the social spheres that Greene engaged in and how she moved across lines of color, class, and culture.

Bates, Karen Grigsby. "." NPR, August 31, 2021.

This article interviews the authorsÌýMarie Benedict and Victoria Christopher Murray, who wrote theÌýPersonal Librarian,Ìýa recent novel based on the life of Belle da Costa Greene.

Belle da Costa Greene and Nella Larsen are two librarians of color, one who is white-passing, and the other of mixed heritage who wrote famously about the phenomenon of passing in her novels. This podcast featuring Adwoa Adusei, Krissa Corbett Cavouras, and Daria Rose Foner tells the stories of these women and asks what they can tell us about race in librarianship and literature. Listen on the .

Colclough, Joanna. Headlines & Heroes: Newspapers, Comics & More Fine Prints (Blog). Library of Congress. February 8, 2022.

This post on theÌýLibrary of Congress website focuses on newspaper articles that feature Belle da Costa Greene. This exploration of primary materials charts Greene's career developments from her being hired as Morgan's private librarian to her retirement as director.

The Duke Franklin Humanities Institution. Left of Black. March 28, 2023.

Dr. Tracy D. Sharpley-Whiting gives an overview of Belle da Costa Greene and Jean Strouse's discovery of her passing. This is a short segment from an interview with the Duke Franklin Humanities Institution on the importance of libraries.

The Morgan Library & Museum. ÌìÃÀ´«Ã½¹ÙÍø Belle da Costa Greene.

The Morgan Library provides biographical information on Belle da Costa Greene's life and role in the library. Their ongoing research on Greene will be featured in their 2024 exhibition and the continued digitization of the Belle Greene-Bernard Berenson Letters Project. Additional Morgan Library Resources:

Garner, Bonnie Jean. Toufait.com: The Marcel Duchamp Studies Online Journal.ÌýUpdated May 22, 2019.

This article shows extrapolates on references to Belle da Costa Greene in artist Marcel Duchamp's Belle Haleine: Eau de Voilette (1921).

Works of Fiction:Ìý

  • - Lapierre, Alexandra. New York, NY: Europa Editions, 2022.
  • - Murray, Victoria, and Heather Terrel. . New York, NY: Penguin Random House, 2021.
Left of Black: Bella da Costa Greene

Select Resources on Passing

Kwok, Roberta. ÌýKellogg Insight,ÌýApril 1, 2021.

Cultural economists Ricardo Dahis, Emily Nix, and Nancy Qian use census data to find a more exact estimate of the number of black men that passed for white between 1880-1940.

Hobbs, Allyson.ÌýCambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2014.

This book provides a history of racial passing in the United States. Hobbs details the possibilities and challenges awarded to people that passed as white in a country obsessed with racial distinctions. The book recognizes the loss and loneliness accompanied by passing.

PBS Digital Studios. Origin of Everything,ÌýFebruary 27, 2019.

This video details the complicated history of passing in the United States and what would motivate someone to disguise their identity.

Works of Fiction:Ìý

  • - Johnson, James Weldon. .ÌýBoston, MA: Sherman, French, & Co., 1912.
  • - Larsen, Nella. .ÌýNew York: Knopf, 1929.
  • - Senna, Danzy. . New York, NY: Penguin Random House, 1998.

Select Resources Related to Exhibition Objects

Dennihy, Melissa. Melus 42, no. 2 (2017): 156–76.Ìý

This essay argues that, inÌýDanzyÌýSenna’s 1998 novelÌýCaucasia, passing is often portrayed as a linguistic act, dependent as much upon the audible as the visible.Ìý

Elliott, Richard. Philip Roth Studies 16, no. 1 (2020): 92–110.

This essay argues that Philip Roth'sÌýThe Human Stain accommodates a position that is antithetical to Coleman's belief that he can transcend his history, reading Roth's novel in light of philosopher Alasdair MacIntyre's insistence that one's life must be understood in the context of a narrative over which one has limited control.

Ryan, Melissa. Studies in the Novel 43, no. 1 (2011): 38–54.Ìý

This article is a critical exploration of gender issues in the novelÌýThe House Behind the CedarsÌýby Charles Chesnutt. It takes account of the gendered aspect of passing seen in the juxtaposition of the Walden siblings.