Fun Home Alison Bechdel Essay

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    The musical follows Alison through her life and the discovery of her sexuality. The first words the audience hears Medium Alison (freshman in college Alison) say are “Please, God, don’t let me be a lesbian.” Of all the theatre that exists in this world, I have never identified with one line more than Alison’s fear of herself. Not only is

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    Bechdel then expresses how the furniture was perfection in her father’s eye. Something that herself and her brothers could never be a part of At the beginning of the story, Bechdel mentioned that her father was short tempered and a bit distant. Bruce’s character is rarely seen as an emotional type of character/father but rather more interested in having bonding time with restoring their home and gardening The grouping of the frame box and the evened out spacing between them creates a more enjoyable

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    I Was A New Friend

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    Prior to this semester, the concept of diversity hardly crossed my mind, and when it did I never took it seriously. Freshman year, when my friends and I would sit out on the yard on sunny days we would joke about how we’d make the perfect photograph for a Xavier brochure because how diverse our group was. And it was pretty diverse. Every major region was covered. At other times, I was very interested in gender diversity; I attended multiple young women leadership programs in high school, but I never

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    Discuss the relationship between sexuality and identity in Fun home. This essay will be examining the relationship between sexuality and identity in the book, Fun Home (2006) by Alison Bechdel. Bechdel’s memoir Fun Home explores the way gender and sexual identity play important roles in the world. It frames the discovery that Bechdel when she was a young girl realised she was a lesbian, whilst at the same time finding out that her father is also homosexual and had been sexually active with males

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    Fun Home follows the story of Alison as she deals with a dysfunctional family and learns about herself and her sexuality in the process. In addition to this, another major focus within Fun Home is Alison’s father and his struggles with his sexual identity, ultimately leading to him taking his life. There are several times within the work that Alison draws maps in order to show the audience the physical locations of where the events portrayed took place. But beyond this, the maps serve to both demonstrate

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    Gender Roles In Fun Home

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    Amir Barati American Culture Prof. Shiu Fun Home: Bechdel’s Neo-Detective Novel of Gender Crime The narration in Alison Bechdel’s Fun Home can be categorized as a significant neo-detective one in many ways. Like every detective story, a suspicious death is deriving the whole narrative, but in a fantastically fresh form. There is a mysterious home, and the mystery lies in the minds and secrets of its residents. The significance of this novel lies in the fact that the narrator is one of the main suspected

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    In her graphic memoir Fun Home, Alison Bechdel tells the interweaving stories of her upbringing, her father’s life and death, and her own journey to come to terms with her sexuality. Bechdel tells these stories in a largely nonlinear fashion, arranging scenes by common theme rather than chronologicity. The only exception to this rule is chapter six, “The Ideal Husband”. This chapter recounts the summer of Bechdel’s fourteenth birthday, during which a number of milestones occur. By abandoning her

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    Searching toward their objectives Alison Bechdel’s memoir Fun Home: A Family Tragicomic (2006) is an unconventional graphic memoir, tracing the trajectory of her vexed relationship with her father, both before and after his death. On the other hand, Adrienne Rich’s poem Diving into the Wreck (1972) is about a diver who goes deep in the ocean to explore a broken wreck. The wreck is an extended metaphor for trying to discover the realities of history, not the male version that has forged a sexist society

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    By the same token, Alison wanted to present in the traditionally masculine way that her father and many other men did. However, because she wasn’t in a position of power, she had to defend her desire time and time again. She does this on occasions such as her trip to Switzerland. She wanted to convince her parents to present more masculine (or androgynous in this case) so she did so by pointing out other women that wore what she wanted to. Her desire for the masculine portrayal of self manifests

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    (Alison and her father’s relationship to and resistance to gender norms) In the story Fun Home, the author describes his family life, and how the main caricature get lesbian. In particularly, the Author (Alison Bechdel) shows the relationship between her and her father in homosexuality. Alison write a comic book describes her life, and her family life as will, especially her father. There is similarities and differences in their relationship and resistance to gender norms in the comic book Fun Home

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