Alison Bechdel Credit: Courtesy of Elena Seibert

In punitively slashing the budgets of their own state colleges, legislators in the South Carolina House of Representatives have unwittingly given late-night comedians a great wealth of new material about narrow-mindedness, blind ideological loyalty and homophobia.

As reported in various media outlets including National Public Radio  the College of Charleston had the audacity to assign to first-year students a book that acknowledges the existence and humanity of people who are not heterosexual. That book, the acclaimed Fun Home by Vermont cartoonist Alison Bechdel  has also been adapted into an award-winning, Pulitzer-nominated off-Broadway musical.

The University of South Carolina Upstate, another school that state legislators deemed worthy of a good, hard spanking, did not assign Fun Home to first-year students, but did assign other works that dare to challenge the state’s centuries-long tradition of upholding heteronormativity.

Fun Home the Musical at the Public Theater in New York City Credit: Courtesy of Cathy Resmer

Because of these colleges’ decisions to assign readings that challenged conservative viewpoints, South Carolina legislators decided that a fair and just punishment was to slash the schools’ funding by $70,000.

Students at both schools have been demonstrating to remind state lawmakers that South Carolina is not, in fact, exempt from the protection of the First Amendment.

In a move that many writers and pundits see as directly connected to the Fun Home flap, conservative Republican Glenn McConnell, the state’s lieutenant governor, has, after intense pressure by those same legislators, just been selected as the new president of the College of Charleston.

At last report, despite the best efforts of South Carolina lawmakers, gay and lesbian Americans continue to exist, even in South Carolina.

Got something to say?

Send a letter to the editor and we'll publish your feedback in print!

Ethan de Seife was an arts writer at Seven Days from 2013 to 2016. He is the author of Tashlinesque: The Hollywood Comedies of Frank Tashlin, published in 2012 by Wesleyan University Press.

One reply on “Alison Bechdel’s Fun Home at Center of South Carolina Controversy”

  1. Really? a tiny 70k budget decrease is newsworthy? Is there ANY indication that this has anything to do with lgbt issues? if it is, please report that. Look at Vermont’s diminishing support for UVM over the decades. Is that about homophobia too? Where is that article? The is one good thing about this article though… it let me know that this musical exists! I hadn’t heard about it.

Comments are closed.