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Utopianism and Idealism in Boy Meets Boy Leviathan depicted gay youth society accordingly an utopian like world when actually the greater part of the gay youth today dont face such amiable circumstances as the ones at Pauls secondary school. As portrayed in Pattees article "Sexual Fantasy: The Queer Utopia of David Levithans Boy Mets Boy". The utopian novel does not exists in the "genuine" world; rather, utopian written work depicts a perfect world that could exist however has not been understood" .
Pauls secondary school is the thing that a "perfect" and totally tolerating secondary school could be similar to, but since we have individuals who are bias and homophobic this world cannot exist yet. Does this utopian secondary school give false want to LGBTQ youthful mature people that there could one day be a world like this where everybody is so tolerating? I might contend that as opposed to imparting a false trust in junior book fans that Levithan give adolescent bookworms the reasonable depictions of what their lives could be similar to and characters that book lovers could join with instead of overstated spoofs like Infinite Darlene.
The issues in the story is that social order has desires for its part and unfortunately being hetero is simply a normal standard and to go against that standard is not taken compassionate. The world is not how it is depicted in Boy Mets Boy the "perfect world" is not this present reality that Lucy exists in. Social order, and Lucy, anticipated that her will like and need young men on the grounds that that is the reason social order has let her know to do. It is terrifying to go against the standards, to go against your folks desires and the desires you had for yourself to acknowledge your emotions as typical.
This accentuation on practical issues and circumstances that LGBTWork CitedLevithan, David. Boy Mets Boy. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2003. Print
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