Boy Meets Trope

In Boy Meets Boy, David Levithan seems to be trying to create a romance that any teenager could relate to. I’m happy that he decided to write stories like these, and despite their weird representation flaws, I think that these books do offer refuge to some teenagers who need queer media. That being said, Boy Meets Boy strays into so many heterosexual romantic comedy tropes that I was a little taken aback. I don’t really want to criticize Levithan for writing something cute and saccharine for a population that does not get a lot of those stories, but golly do I want to document these tropes. I’m going to use ones found from TvTropes.org. Let’s go.

  1. Flowers of Romance
  2. Third Wheel
  3. Accidental Adultery (to a lesser extent since there is zero sexual content)
  4. Anguished Declaration of Love: good riddance
  5. The Bet
  6. Better As Friends
  7. Boy Meets Boy: There was not any way that this entire plot was not a trope
  8. Cock Fight: Ted needs to calm down.
  9. Dismissing A Compliment
  10. The First Cut Is The Deepest (variation)
  11. Friend Versus Lover: Oh, Joni.
  12. Grand Romantic Gesture: THE ACTUAL WORST
  13. Intimate Artistry
  14. It Doesn’t Mean Anything: Paul, don’t kid yourself
  15. Love At First Sight: Paul, stop
  16. Love Martyr: As seen through Paul’s eyes, anyway
  17. Love Triangle
  18. Second Act Breakup
  19. Serenade Your Lover

So these are just the tropes that I thought obviously fit – there may be more that I missed. I guess my question is: do the tropes of romantic novels help or hurt Boy Meets Boy? I didn’t like them, but I also have a big problem with Grand Romantic Gestures. Also, does the use of devices like the Grand Romantic Gesture help or hurt teens’ understanding of healthy relationships? I’m not sure it’s doing them any favors.

One response to “Boy Meets Trope”

  1. I think the grand romantic gesture can create a unrealistic expectation for readers. Not only because they might expect a grand romantic gesture when someone messes up, but it also gives people a way out when they mess up. I’m a firm believer in second chances don’t get me wrong, but when it comes to cheating (like in boy meets boy) a cheater is a cheater. It can be a personality type or emblematic of greater character flaws or weak relationship ties. YA readers don’t need to take away from this that they should forgive someone who hurt them just because they put in the work to organize a grand gesture, and they shouldn’t feel like they are justified in hurting someone else because they can just fix it with some Hollywood romance.

    Like

Leave a comment