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2025 - DUE 15 September 2025
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, Torch Song Trilogy as a Bildungsroman
Harvey Fierstein’s Torch Song Trilogy may be read as a poignant and often comedic
bildungsroman, a narrative charting the moral and psychological growth of its protagonist,
Arnold Beckoff. While the genre typically follows a young person’s journey from childhood to
adulthood, Fierstein’s play subverts this tradition by focusing on a man in his thirties who must
overcome a series of emotional and social obstacles to achieve a mature sense of self-acceptance
and belonging. Arnold’s journey is not a simple linear progression; it is a tumultuous, multi-act
struggle against both internal insecurities and external societal prejudice. He must navigate the
complexities of queer love, family rejection, and the search for identity and family, ultimately
proving that true maturity is found not in conformity, but in the radical act of self-love and
defiant self-creation.
In the first act, International Stud, Arnold is presented as an emotionally vulnerable and insecure
figure, a drag queen yearning for a stable, committed relationship. He is a romantic idealist,
clinging to the hope of a fairy-tale ending despite a string of painful experiences. The primary
obstacle he faces here is his own emotional immaturity and lack of self-worth, which manifests
in his reliance on fleeting relationships and his desperate pursuit of love. His affair with Ed, a
bisexual teacher, highlights his naivety. Arnold believes he can make Ed leave his wife and
commit to him, a fantasy that ultimately proves devastating. His emotional dependency on Ed
and his inability to see past his own idealized version of a relationship are his main challenges.
This part of his journey is less about external prejudice and more about the internal conflict of
learning to love himself before he can demand love from others. He must accept that he is
worthy of a relationship on his own terms, rather than as a second option.
The second act, Fugue in a Laundry, introduces a new set of obstacles, some of which are
directly attributable to social prejudice. Having ended his relationship with Ed, Arnold embarks
on a new chapter with Alan and plans to adopt a child. This aspiration confronts him with the
institutional prejudice of the 1970s. The play subtly highlights the legal and social barriers
preventing gay people from forming families. Arnold’s conversation with the unseen adoption
agency worker, which he relays to his friends, underscores the bureaucratic and discriminatory
hurdles he faces. The world sees him not as a potential parent, but as a "homosexual," a category
it deems unfit for parenthood. This period of his life is also tragically marked by the death of
Alan, his partner, which is a devastating external event that forces Arnold to confront profound
grief and loneliness. The loss of Alan is a profound setback, but it also solidifies Arnold's resolve
to create a family on his own terms. The obstacles of social prejudice and personal tragedy
intertwine, forcing him to grow and find strength he did not know he had.
The final act, Widows and Children First!, brings Arnold's journey to its climax and introduces
his most formidable obstacle: his mother. The conflict with his mother is the ultimate test of
Arnold’s growth, as it is a deeply personal manifestation of the societal prejudice he has faced.
She represents the old world’s rigid, heterosexual norms and her unyielding belief that Arnold's