Such a Fun Age

by

Kiley Reid

White Guilt, Ignorance, and Redemption Theme Analysis

Themes and Colors
External Behavior vs. Internal Truth  Theme Icon
White Guilt, Ignorance, and Redemption Theme Icon
The Quest for Meaning  Theme Icon
Race, Class, and Privilege  Theme Icon
LitCharts assigns a color and icon to each theme in Such a Fun Age, which you can use to track the themes throughout the work.
White Guilt, Ignorance, and Redemption Theme Icon

Throughout the novel, Emira encounters many characters who are determined to empower and improve her. And while many of these characters believe (or want to believe) that they are acting purely out of concern for Emira’s wellbeing, it’s more often the case that guilt and self-interest motivate their acts of goodwill. After a grocery store security guard racially profiles Emira while she is watching Briar and accuses her of kidnapping the toddler, Alix is overcome with guilt for the role she played in this act of injustice: Emira wouldn’t have been out with Briar so late at night had Alix not called on Emira to watch Briar during a family crisis. In an effort to assuage her guilt, Alix makes Emira her personal project: she tries to become friends with Emira and make her feel like part of the family, and she also becomes obsessed with seeking justice for the racist treatment Emira experienced at Market Depot.

But Alix’s determination to atone for Emira’s traumatic experience—and for a much earlier act of injustice Alix committed as a high school senior—blinds her to the ways that her efforts to empower Emira make Emira uncomfortable and unhappy. Alix might want to be friends with Emira, but the power imbalance at the core of their employer-employee relationship prevents Emira from feeling that she and Alix can be equals. Eventually, Alix’s determination to find justice for Emira leads her to leak a recording of the Market Depot incident to the press—despite Emira’s repeated insistence that she wants to put the incident behind her. It eventually becomes clear that Alix’s acts of solidarity only serve to alleviate Alix’s guilt over the direct and indirect ways that her wealth and white privilege contribute to Emira’s suffering. Similarly, Emira’s boyfriend (and, awkwardly, Alix’s ex-boyfriend from high school) Kelley Copeland aspires to progressive ideals—all the while objectifying and fetishizing Black people and Black culture. The novel thus shows how white guilt and ignorance can corrupt otherwise good intentions, ultimately leading people to harm the very people they claim to empower.

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White Guilt, Ignorance, and Redemption ThemeTracker

The ThemeTracker below shows where, and to what degree, the theme of White Guilt, Ignorance, and Redemption appears in each chapter of Such a Fun Age. Click or tap on any chapter to read its Summary & Analysis.
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White Guilt, Ignorance, and Redemption Quotes in Such a Fun Age

Below you will find the important quotes in Such a Fun Age related to the theme of White Guilt, Ignorance, and Redemption.
Chapter 4 Quotes

In her first week of babysitting for the Chamberlains, Emira took Briar to a painting class. She’d been wearing an oversized knit cardigan, the kind that paint would never come out of, and Alix offered her one of her many white LetHer Speak polos. “I actually have tons of these and you’re the same size as my old interns,” she’d said. “Well, they might be a bit big on you, but you’re welcome to wear one anytime.” This became Emira’s uniform. Three times a week, Alix came downstairs to find Emira slipping a white polo over her head. She hung it up on the coatrack just before she left. And suddenly, as Alix walked through blue ribbons hanging from the balloons above, the tenderness of this tradition made her throat start to close.

Related Characters: Emira Tucker, Alix Chamberlain/Alex Murphy, Briar Chamberlain
Related Symbols: The LetHer Speak Polo
Page Number: 49
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 6 Quotes

There were moments like this that Alix tried to breeze over, but they got stuck somewhere between her heart and ears. She knew Emira had gone to college. She knew Emira had majored in English. But sometimes, after seeing her paused songs with titles like “Dope Bitch” and “Y’all Already Know,” and then hearing her use words like connoisseur, Alix was filled with feelings that went from confused and highly impressed to low and guilty in response to the first reaction. There was no reason for Emira to be unfamiliar with this word. And there was no reason for Alix to be impressed. Alix completely knew these things, but only when she reminded herself to stop thinking them in the first place.

Related Characters: Emira Tucker, Alix Chamberlain/Alex Murphy
Page Number: 79
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 7 Quotes

Emira had dated one white guy before, and repeatedly hooked up with another during the summer after college. They both loved bringing her to parties, and they told her she should try wearing her hair naturally. And suddenly, in a way they hadn’t in the first few interactions, these white men had a lot to say about government-funded housing, minimum wage, and the quotes from Martin Luther King Jr. […] But Kelley seemed different. […] but still . . . shouldn’t he have said “the N-word” instead? […] Sitting across from him, she wrestled with feeling moderately appalled that he had said the whole thing, with that painfully distinctive hard r sound at the end, but as she watched the veins in his hands move as he took a last bite, she settled on, You know what? Imma let you get away with that too.

Related Characters: Emira Tucker, Kelley Copeland
Page Number: 93
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 8 Quotes

Somehow, even worse, that night at the Murphy house accomplished everything Kelley had evidently hoped it would. Alex learned that Kelley had left her house only to run into Robbie’s fleeing friends on the street. He drove them to the precinct, where they waited all night until Robbie was released. Kelley was the one to drive Robbie home.

Related Characters: Emira Tucker, Alix Chamberlain/Alex Murphy, Kelley Copeland , Robbie Cormier
Page Number: 109
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 9 Quotes

Whenever Alix was afraid that Emira was mad at her, she came back to the same line of thought: Oh God, did she finally see what Peter said on the news? No, she couldn’t have. She’s always like this, right? Emira came upstairs as Alix finished washing her hands.

Related Characters: Emira Tucker, Alix Chamberlain/Alex Murphy, Briar Chamberlain, Peter Chamberlain, Laney Thacker
Related Symbols: Spoons the Fish
Page Number: 117
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 11 Quotes

Alix also found herself reorganizing her lifestyle around Emira, despite the fact that she didn’t have an explicit reason to. If Alix went shopping, she took the tags off clothes and other items immediately so Emira couldn’t see how much she’d spent, even though Emira wasn’t the type to show interest or ask. Alix no longer felt comfortable leaving out certain books or magazines, because she feared Emira eyeing her Marie Kondo book and subsequently thinking, Wow, how privileged are you that you need to buy a hardcover book that tells you how to get rid of all your other expensive shit.

Related Characters: Emira Tucker, Alix Chamberlain/Alex Murphy
Page Number: 138
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 13 Quotes

The reality of how completely different this run-in was from the last fifteen years of Kelley Copeland fantasies came down on Alix and crushed her lungs. She was still eight pounds heavier than she’d been before Catherine. The current state of her home wasn’t the modern, minimalist environment she’d worked so hard to achieve. And there were babies everywhere, not just the sleeping cute kind but Briar with her questions […] Throughout marriage, motherhood, and monumental career changes, Alix had always found herself forming ideal scenarios of how she would see a grown-up Kelley Copeland, or rather, how he’d see her. There were the cliché pipe dreams (seeing him after a particularly good blowout, running into him while wearing heels at the airport), but there were elaborate premises that took Alix entire showers and subway rides to fully flesh out the logistics of.

Related Characters: Emira Tucker, Alix Chamberlain/Alex Murphy, Kelley Copeland , Briar Chamberlain
Page Number: 157
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 14 Quotes

Emira said, “Sure,” but this all felt very strange. Not only did she not know how to fold silverware into napkins, but the pile of hand towels seemed careless in a way that didn’t match Mrs. Chamberlain. Mrs. Chamberlain definitely would have completed this task before guests arrived. Had Tamra unassembled them just so she and Emira could have this moment? Weren’t they all about to have dinner together anyway? Emira looked down and she was almost startled to find her own olive green dress, instead of the oversized white polo she wore every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday.

Related Characters: Emira Tucker (speaker), Alix Chamberlain/Alex Murphy, Kelley Copeland , Tamra
Related Symbols: The LetHer Speak Polo
Page Number: 164
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 18 Quotes

“You’re not better than anyone,” she said, “when you hang up your own coat and take your plate to the trash. I’ve been those girls helping out tonight. I fucking am those girls helping out tonight, and you’re not making anything easier by giving them less to do. It’s like eating everything on your plate ’cause you think someone else won’t go hungry if you don’t. You’re not helping anyone but yourself.”

Related Characters: Emira Tucker (speaker), Alix Chamberlain/Alex Murphy, Kelley Copeland , Briar Chamberlain, The Security Guard
Page Number: 191
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 21 Quotes

Alix pivoted. “At first I was just so stunned to see him at all. But knowing him as well as I did, I became a little concerned about his reasons for dating you.”
Emira flinched and looked at the floor. “I don’t know. I think I’m like . . . pretty chill and dateable.”

Related Characters: Emira Tucker (speaker), Alix Chamberlain/Alex Murphy (speaker), Kelley Copeland , Robbie Cormier
Page Number: 218-219
Explanation and Analysis:

“I’m not finished.” Alix held up a flat hand in the air. “If you think I’m going to sit back while you try to look cool with someone who is like family to me, then you’re crazy.” Alix took a second to pause for effect. “If you’re still okay fetishizing black people like you did in high school, fine. Just don’t pull that shit with my sitter.”

Related Characters: Alix Chamberlain/Alex Murphy (speaker), Emira Tucker, Kelley Copeland , Peter Chamberlain, Robbie Cormier
Page Number: 224
Explanation and Analysis:

“You act like what happened to you was worse than what happened to Robbie, even though—let’s not even go there. If you love Emira so much, then let her wear what she wants,” Kelley jeered. “I’m sure I didn’t handle things well back in high school. I was seventeen, I was an idiot. But at least I’m not still requiring a uniform for someone who works for me so I can pretend like I own them.”

“Ohmygod!” Alix formed fists with both hands on the table. “You have no idea what you’re talking about. She asked! I lent her a shirt!”

“You lend her the same shirt? Every day? In the business we call that a uniform.”

“You are so completely out of line.”

Related Characters: Alix Chamberlain/Alex Murphy (speaker), Kelley Copeland (speaker), Emira Tucker, Robbie Cormier, Claudette, The Murphys
Related Symbols: The LetHer Speak Polo
Page Number: 227-228
Explanation and Analysis:

Alix had started her day in Manhattan, ready to tell Kelley, I know who you really are. But now she sat in Philadelphia, participating in a losing game called “Which One of Us Is Actually More Racist?”

Related Characters: Alix Chamberlain/Alex Murphy (speaker), Emira Tucker, Kelley Copeland , Peter Chamberlain
Page Number: 228
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 23 Quotes

Tamra’s eyes went small in an exaggerated and confident expression. “Oh girl, yes,” she said. “One hundred percent. This is probably the best thing to ever happen to Emira.”

Related Characters: Tamra (speaker), Emira Tucker, Alix Chamberlain/Alex Murphy, Kelley Copeland , Zara , Peter Chamberlain, Laney Thacker
Page Number: 262
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 25 Quotes

“Everybody wins with this,” Laney promised her. “Emira gets to clear her name. Peter’s little mix-up will be smoothed over. And you’ll get to come back into the spotlight a bit. And don’t worry, I know exactly how to plug your book without plugging your book. You know what I mean.”

Related Characters: Laney Thacker (speaker), Emira Tucker, Alix Chamberlain/Alex Murphy, Peter Chamberlain
Page Number: 277
Explanation and Analysis:

She chose you. Emira and Kelley are no longer together. Stay with it, Alix. You’re almost there.

Related Characters: Alix Chamberlain/Alex Murphy (speaker), Emira Tucker, Kelley Copeland , Zara , Tamra, Laney Thacker
Related Symbols: The LetHer Speak Polo
Page Number: 283
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 26 Quotes

“All of this was for you!” Mrs. Chamberlain cried. “We wanted to help you clear your name and you turn around and do this? Whatever Kelley said, I . . . Emira. Everything we’ve done was for you. Everything,” she said. Her focused stare seemed to say, I know you know what I did, and I also don’t care. “You might be too young to understand this right now, but we have always had your best interests at heart. Emira, we, we love you.” Mrs. Chamberlain threw her hands up in surrender as she said this, as if loving Emira was despite her family’s other best interests. “I don’t . . .” She shook her head. “I don’t know what to say.”

Related Characters: Alix Chamberlain/Alex Murphy (speaker), Emira Tucker, Kelley Copeland , Peter Chamberlain
Page Number: 294
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 27 Quotes

Kelley was the guy who ruined her senior year, much in the same way that her name was spelled A-l-i-x.

Related Characters: Alix Chamberlain/Alex Murphy, Kelley Copeland , Robbie Cormier, The Murphys
Page Number: 298-299
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 28 Quotes

Deep into her thirties, Emira would wrestle with what to take from her time at the Chamberlain house. Some days she carried the sweet relief that Briar would learn to become a self-sufficient person. And some days, Emira would carry the dread that if Briar ever struggled to find herself, she’d probably just hire someone to do it for her.

Related Characters: Emira Tucker, Alix Chamberlain/Alex Murphy, Briar Chamberlain, The Murphys
Page Number: 305
Explanation and Analysis: