Homosexuality In Jeanette's Oranges Are Not The Only Fruit

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Among all the LGBT books I have read since the beginning of the semester, Oranges Are Not the Only Fruit has left me the most impression, especially with the scene that Jeanette was found to be gay and forced to confess. Jeanette faced the rigid regulations of the church due to her pure love with Melanie. The so called church family cruelly locked her in the parlor for the thirty-six hours and denied her any food. In her confinement, Jeanette becomes delirious and visualized the demon that occupies her. The demon is orange, which is the only fruit in Jeanette’s mother’s world. Due to hunger, Jeanette eventually falsely repenting in order to escape the parlor, but did not send the demon inside her away. The orange demon represents Jeanette’s homosexual identity, which makes her different from her small church community. Her false repentance is her first conquest over her internal territory, which she refused to yield the church’s blindly religious over her internal sense of self. As in the novel, Jeanette got punished and treated harshly by heterosexual church people because of her homosexual identity. Questions like “Should we come out?” is an entangled problem that probably bothered LGBT group all the time. This paper will share some real life stories about coming out celebrities and social acceptance of LGBT group statistically.
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Before the grand move by Cook, gay and lesbian community are puzzled that whether they should come out or not in the company due to a lack of openly gay leaders. “By this action, he is not going to just increase the visibility of inclusiveness in the workplace,” said Sylvia Ann Hewlett, an economist and founder of the Center for Talent Innovation, a diversity think tank. “He will give a lot of companies the courage to join

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