Sunday, October 4, 2015
Intertextuality in Fun Home
Intertextuality denotes the relationship or connection between a specific work and other texts. It is a way of discussing direct references to other works.
Fun Home by Alison Bechdel is a text that is absolutely full of references to other works, especially to other magazines and great works of literature. Throughout the story, Bechdel constantly makes reference to magazines like Esquire and GQ how does these affected her life. Through this lens, she explains the change she saw in herself, in her sexuality and preferences, from the time that she was a young girl until she was a grown woman. She also uses her choice in magazines as a representation of how she was different from other girls her age.
In the beginning of the graphic novel, Bechdel compares her family life to that of the family in It's a Wonderful Life. Her family life is the exact opposite of what she seeings in It's a Wonderful Life. At the point of the story when this movie is brought up, the reader does not yet know to what extent the Bechdel family is different from other families. The Addams family is also mentioned.
Most of the book talks about classic novels Bechdel's father spent his time reading. Each time a novel is brought up it is to compare her father or some aspect of her life to what is happening in the story to the characters or the author of the novel. Even the age her father was when he died is compared of that to various authors. Plot pieces in stories are used to parallel Bechdel's father and his actions. Would he have died (Bechdel thinks that it was a suicide) if he had not read Joyce or Proust?
Ever have a read a piece of literature that mentioned this many other pieces. Just about every author of a classic or classic is mentioned at some point in this graphic novel. Fitzgerald, Wilde, Proust, Camus, Joyce, Shepard, Shakespeare, and James are all mentioned in Fun Home.
These references to other texts and popular culture are a huge part of Fun Home. They help to create the time, place, and structure of the world Bechdel lived in while growing up. They explain her family and life. Textual and cultural references make up the world of Fun Home. Without these references the reader would not be able to fully understand how she lived or what she went through. Without them, it would be an entirely different graphic novel altogether...it simply wouldn't be.
Labels:
Comic,
fun home,
intertextuality
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