The Generational Comparison: Coming Out vs. Staying Hidden
Fun Home , the “Family Tragicomic,” was introduced to us with the preface of the author, Alison Bechdel, and her queer identity. We’re made aware from the very first chapter that she ‘shared’ with her father this distinctiveness, with one key difference we later find out: The culture of Alison’s time made coming out a possible reality for her, while quite the opposite was the reality for her father. Their experiences with their sexuality demonstrate how important the generational context shapes the story of the Bechdels. Alison, our author and main protagonist of the book, goes through a journey of self-discovery during a time that provided more space for this sort of exploration that her father, being of the previous generation, was not afforded the luxury of. She, like her father, turns to literature as a means of navigating her individuality, finding pieces of herself in the works she reads. She actively seeks out ways to define what she f...