Fun Home Alison Bechdel Essay

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    a labyrinth. This short story also can be used as somewhat of a lens while reading Fun Home by Alison Bechdel. Borges’ story begins with frame narrative but both stories are, for the most part, told from a first person point of view. This aspect of point of view is very helpful in supporting the idea of infinite possibilities and infinite universes. By writing their stories from a first person point of view Bechdel and Borges give their readers a glimpse into the idea that each action, however little

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    the ‘autobiographical pact’ as deals with this concept of the ‘I’ through the voice of Alison. The autographic memoir focuses on her relationship with her father and can be read as a coming out memoir. This memoir contains a sense of autobiographical intimacy as the reader is taken on a journey through the experience of Alison and the truth behind this experience. Julia Watson in her article notes that Bechdel makes “visual connections between photos and memory images… past events, to genealogical

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    Identity In Fun Home

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    Fun Home: A Family Tragicomic As Alison begins to question her identity and sexuality, she recalls bits of memories from her past to help her find who she is. The most interesting and impacting discovery occurs when Alison learns about her father’s sexuality. Alison can now identify herself with her father, yet she can’t be proud of his character. Unlike Alison, her father portrays shameful emotions towards his sexuality. The finding underlines the internal conflict of the father and the themes

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    Bechdel's Ideal

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    Alison Bechdel’s graphic memoir Fun Home: A Family Tragicomic (2006) constructs the narrative around the tragic event of her father’s death in conjunction with the development of her lesbian identity. The extract is from Chapter Six The Ideal Husband, where Alison feels obligated to record her secretion in her diary. However, upon seeing her younger-self’s diary entries, Alison becomes indifferent to recording her experience of adolescence in her diary. The extract is suitable for exploring how it

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    In Fun Home, by Alison Bechdel, Bruce’s outward expression does not reflect his internal identity representing the old ideology that biological sex determines identity and expression. Whereas Alison’s gradual shift to a typically masculine appearance illustrates how there

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    Gender roles are a set of societal norms that dictate the different types of behavior which are generally considered acceptable for people based on their actual or perceived sex or sexuality. In the graphic novel “Fun Home: Old Man, Old Artificer” by Alison Bechdel and the story “Shiloh’ by Bobbie Ann Mason the main characters switch gender roles. These stories use irony to convey the gender roles men and women are supposed to have; however Old Man, Old Artificer reveals what happens when you try

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    Obscenity in Fun Home ​​Should it be acceptable to implement obscene literature in the education curriculum, even at the cost of one’s moral beliefs? Fun Home, written by Alison Bechdel, is a graphic memoir that illustrates the relationship of the character Alison with her father, Bruce. Although they did not share an intimate father-daughter bond in Alison’s childhood, Alison grows up to bear many of her father’s traits, such as being queer. Unfortunately, her memories with her father are short-lived

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    novel autobiography Fun Home, Alison Bechdel depicts her reactions and interactions with her father’s death as being very unserious, lighthearted, and at times humorous. The actions and behaviors of her father, Bruce, clearly have an effect on Alison’s behavior and the unusual way that she approaches death. Moreover, the outlining of similarities between her and Bruce, especially concerning death, enriches our understanding of Bechdel’s uniting of the past and present. Bechdel uses Alison’s downplayed

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    In Alison Bechdel’s graphic novel Fun Home, the themes of isolation and sexuality are ironically coupled together. Alison’s father, Bruce Bechdel, is a closet homosexual who carries this great burden with him his entire life. The weight of his secret and the necessity to suppress it cause him to be withdrawn and cold to his family. Alison is left with a hollow relationship between herself and her father, an emptiness that she struggles with her entire life. After years of a strained relationship

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    outweigh it. Alison Bechdel’s “Fun Home” has an electrate quality through, not just the images, but the writing style and using obtuse meanings within her illustrations, that seem to enable a new learning style, supported by ‘disorders’ such as autism and Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD). “Fun Home” uses both text and graphics to recount the author’s life. The script has many

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