Title of article :
Codes, Silences, and Homophobia: Challenging
Normative Assumptions About Gender and Sexuality
in Contemporary LGBTQ Young Adult Literature
Abstract :
Since the publication of the first young adult novel to deal with issues of
sexual identity, John Donovan’s (1969) I’ll Get There, It Better Be Worth the Trip,
over 200 novels have been published centered around gay, lesbian, bisexual,
transgender, queer and questioning (LGBTQ) characters and conflicts (Cart and
Jenkins, 2006, The Heart has Its Reasons: Young Adult Literature with Gay/Lesbian/
Queer Content, 1969–2004. Lanham, MD: Scarecrow Press). In significant
contrast to early texts, many authors in recent years have sought to promote
inclusion of LGBTQ individuals and to present LGBTQ characters in a positive
light. To do so, they frequently create antagonistic homophobic characters and
situations that provide a sense of realism (Crisp, 2009, Children’s Literature in
Education, 40, 333–348). In this paper, I present several representative examples
from these novels that challenge homophobia, but ultimately leave it intact. Text
excerpts are drawn from the numerous contemporary realistic LGBTQ-themed
texts, published between the years 2000–2005, and marketed to young adults. I then
contrast these texts with the novel Boy Meets Boy (Levithan, 2003). Through the
novel’s blurred genres and inventive use of linguistic features, Boy Meets Boy is
able to more effectively undermine heteronormative assumptions by presenting the
unthinkable: children as sexual beings, hegemonic masculinity as in fact nonhegemonic
and detrimental to success, and homosexuality as normalized and even
ordinary.