The Vanishing Half By Brit Bennett

1348 Words3 Pages

In The Vanishing Half by Brit Bennett, a light-skinned African-American woman who easily passes as white creates a new life as a white woman, leaving a traumatic past behind and altering her character as she knows it, for the better or worse, can be determined throughout the novel. After escaping the confines of her hometown Mallard and her sexually abusive employer at age 16, Stella Vignes lives in New Orleans with her twin sister, Desiree. Eventually, Stella Vignes finds that the ease and convenience of being white gives her opportunities that she cannot find elsewhere, especially if she continues to live as her true self, even if it means leaving her only family behind. Given the state of society in the United States throughout Stella’s life, passing as white enables …show more content…

So although changing her identity forced Stella to give up many things such as her “other half”, Desiree, and caused paranoia of being caught in her lie, it also gave her many good things in life. A deeper look within Stella’s character shows her logic and need for comfort within her life so if passing over gave her enough grief, she would leave such hardship, just as she did before by escaping Mallard. “At the same time, Desiree could never meet Miss Vignes. Stella could only be her when Desiree was not around. In the morning, during her ride to Maison Blanche, she closed her eyes and slowly walked away. She imagined another life, another past. “She let her mind go blank, her whole life vanishing, until she became new and clean as a baby” (page 187). Although both twins faced practically the same trauma, they were both individuals who handled their experiences in opposite ways, so for Stella, beginning anew was the most viable and feasible option. Stella had always been quieter, more closed off compared to

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