28 Inspiring Quotes By Alison Bechdel, The Celebrated Cartoonist And Memoirist
Famous As: American Cartoonist Known for the Long-Running Comic Strip 'Dykes to Watch Out For'
Born On: 1960
Born In: Beech Creek, Pennsylvania, United States
Age: 64 Years
Alison Bechdel is a famous American author, illustrator, cartoonist and memoirist. She completed her graduation from Oberlin College and went on to work as a word processor. She further started her own comic strip ‘Dykes to Watch Out For’ which was one of the earliest representations of the life of lesbians in the society. Her work became famous in the LGBT community and it turned to be a huge success and ran for almost 25 years in various newspapers. It was further collected in a book form ‘The Essential Dykes to Watch Out For’. After her enormous success she came up with the graphic novel ‘Fun Home: A Family Tragicomic’ and also wrote a memoir of her family life. She further wrote another graphic novel ‘Are You My Mother? A Comic Drama’ which portrayed her complex relationship with her mother. Her contribution to the comic world got her the ‘MacArthur Fellows “Genius” Award’. Her views on topics or issues close to her heart have appeared through the characters of her books or through her writings. Her writing has produced several quotes and shared by people. Her thoughts and quotations tackle the most serious and sensitive topics in a lighter tone. Go through these quotes by Alison Bechdel that will take you through some intentionally ignored part of the society.
It was a vicious cycle, though. The more gratification we found in our own geniuses, the more isolated we grew.
Alison Bechdel
I'd been upstaged, demoted from protagonist in my own drama to comic relief in my parents' tragedy
Alison Bechdel
It's imprecise and insufficient, defining the homosexual as a person whose gender expression is at odds with his or her sex.
Alison Bechdel
It's our very capacity for self-consciousness that makes us self-destructive!
Alison Bechdel
If there was ever a bigger pansy than my father, it was Marcel Proust.
Alison Bechdel
The writer's business is to find the shape in unruly life and to serve her story. Not, you may note, to serve her family, or to serve the truth, but to serve the story.
My homosexuality remained at that point purely theoretical, an untested hypothesis. But it was a hypothesise so thorough and so convincing I saw no reason not to share it immediately.
I am not ultimately interested in writing fiction. I can't make things up. Or rather, I can only make things up about things that have already happened.
Psychoanalytic insight, Miller seems to suggest, is itself a pathological symptom.
Alison Bechdel
How Horrid" has a slightly facetious tone that strikes me as Wildean. It appears to embrace the actual horror--puberty, public disgrace--then at the last second nimbly sidesteps it, laughing.