Is the teacher in anne with an e gay

Anne with an E and its LGBTQ+ characters

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:warning: Warning :warning:

Some spoilers ahead

Anne with an E is a series on Netflix. It's about a girl named Anne (obviously) who is an orphan. She gets adopted by Marilla and Matthew Cuthbert . It follows her life at school, with her family, with her friends... and shows some very struggling and glad moments of all their lives in the town of Green Gables.

(It's based off the book "Anne of Green Gables")

So I binge watched season two of Anne with an E recently and it was AMAZING. Today I wanted to talk about the LGBTQ+ characters of the show.

In season one I had some suspicions that some characters in the show were LGBTQ, but on season two it was a topic that was openly discussed. Not only that but they also touched more on the topics of racism and sexism during this recent season.

So let's begin! Shall we?

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Josephine Barry (Great Aunt Josephine)

Who is she ?

Aunt Josephine is the Superb Aunt of Diana who is the best confidant of the main personality, Anne.

How is she part of the LGBTQ+ people ?

Aunt Josephine shows up in season one an

Anne With An E: 9 Things About Cole That You Missed

Things inAnne With An E got shaken up a little with the advent of season two. Up until this point, Anne was the main—often, the only—trail-blazer of the show, especially when it came to the children characters. But then Cole Mackenzie came along and added a whole novel world of color.

RELATED: Anne With An E: 10 Things That Make No Sense About Anne

Cole adds to the misfit theme of the show, but without being redundant or cliche. Cole is the more soft, subdued complement to Anne's wildfire approach to animation, providing the opportunity for new personality dynamics and perspectives. There is much to appreciate about Cole, especially things that might not be immediately clear to the viewer.

He's The First Queer Character In The Show

While Cole isn't technically the first gay character to be seen on the show—both the university teacher and Aunt Jo have made appearances—he is the first to be indicated as such. Cole stands out from the other kids at educational facility, and, when prompted to kiss a girl in a game, he refuses. He only kisses Anne in establish of solidarity, as there is clearly no romance betwee

I just finished watching the first two season’s of Netflix’s Anne with an E. And I very much have thoughts.

First, I am a big fan of the original Anne novels. I started reading them in high school, and I regard them as old friends. I’m also aware that AwaE used the first novel as a jumping off point, and was not intended to be a precise dramatization. Megan Fellows and Colleen Dewhurst already did a perfect job; no need to do it again.

Although, I have to speak, the first few scenes were pretty much taken directly from the book, and there were other instances like that throughout the series. It’s more a retelling than anything else. Which is fine.

The costuming is marvelous – I adore the knitwear, and Marilla’s leather belt, although it itself is completely anachronistic and seems to serve no purpose but to emphasize Marilla’s angles. Unlike Dewhurst, this Marilla is as tall, thin and spare as she’s described in the book.

I like how they’ve introduced issues that are still with us today and certainly were then, but were entirely unaddressed in the novel – racism, homophobia and the favor, and that they were very careful with the language. That last is anachronistic, but rea

I always liked the titular main traits in Anne of Green Gables. But the CBC’s Anne with an E made me care for her. 

As a kid, I watched the mid-’80s screen adaptations, and I’m sure Anne’s creative soul inspired me to become a author. I have gleefully visited the real-life Green Gables on Prince Edward Island more than once. I even maintain some cherished hardcover versions of the novels, but, I have to confess, I haven’t peruse them all. Authenticity be told, growing up, I was more of an Emily of Novel Moon girlie. After all, as Natasha Lyonne’s character in Russian Doll puts it: “Everybody loves Anne, but I like Emily. She’s dark.”

Though Anne has a tragic backstory just like Emily, the Green Gables main character is keen to locate the best in people. She falls deeply in adore with just about everything around her: P.E.I’s landscapes, the big words she learns in academy and her optimal friends. I liked Anne, but for the cynical among us, the usual emphasis on her sunny outlook can be a brief tedious. So when I heard that Anne with an E, the CBC’s adaptation of the story, did something different, I was intrigued. 

“It’s the only Anne that doesn’t make me roll my eyes,” my fr