In the novel, Persepolis: The Story of a Childhood by Marjane Satrapi, there are many different themes that you could look at and decide to analyze. I decided to look at four different themes that are brought up throughout the novel. In the novel there is a lot of talk about the contrasting regions of Iran and everywhere else in the world, politics and religion, and warfare.…
Marjane Satrapi’s graphic novel, Persepolis, is an autobiography about her life during the Iranian Revolution and war. The film version of Persepolis is quite similar, however, the intention of the film is slightly different than the book. The book has many detailed panels that tell more of a dramatic story of Marjane’s life, while the film is less dramatic and detailed.…
In the book Persepolis, there are two major phases that happens in the Iranian Revolution. In the first phase, the Shah is overthrown and after the Shah is gone, a radical theory is established. In Persepolis, the main point or the outline story reflects on how the law in forcing them to change their way of living in this story. In this book, there were many ways of living during the revolution.…
Religion is a reoccurring and important theme in the graphic novel, ‘Persepolis’ by Marjane Satrapi. It is an autobiography about a young girl, Marjane, who is brought up during the Shah’s regime and the Islamic revolution.…
Customs and Traditions,Religion, and Social Organizations impact the protagonist of Persepolis. Culture of Iran overall impacts the protagonist, but these are the main factors.…
The graphic novel Persepolis, by Marjane Satrapi, is a autobiography describing her childhood in Iran and her early life and studies in Europe. As a graphic novel, the book uses text and drawings to tell the story. The autobiography is effectively transmitted because, even though the images do not tell the story by themselves, they help the reader visualize it, and help set the tone and mood.…
The brutality of the Iran-Iraq war, sparked by the Iranian revolution, was largely portrayed in the film as completely senseless—it was implied that both sides had basically lost any reason behind the war, and were fighting just to fight. Moreover, martyrdom was encouraged, and by the end of the war, casualties reached the millions. Although estimates vary, the Correlates of War Project estimated that 500,000 Iraqi and 750,000 Iranian people died as a result of the war (Kurzman 2013). An illustration of martyrdom speaks volumes to social class differences: a lower-class woman comes to Marji’s mother for help after her son is given the key to heaven; this brings light to the fact that young boys from the poorer class were often targets, indoctrinated by the religious government into the belief that dying for their country was the ultimate sacrifice and would ultimately bring them closer to God. We also see both the hostility toward Western culture by Islamic fundamentalists and the contrast of Marji’s yearning for Western culture by Marji; indulging in western culture is seen as sinful and as violation of the Islamic law. Later in the film, we see Marji feeling shamed by western culture: Marji lies about her ethnicity, telling a boy she meets that she is French, attributable to the Western stereotyping of Iran and the fear of being seen as a “savage” because she is Iranian. Overall, the culture of Iran during this period was shaped by an overbearing religious government that is accepted by some and refuted by others, and because of the violent persecution of people who oppose that government and brutal war between Iran and Iraq, the rest of the world began to stereotype the Iranian people as heartless savages who held their religious beliefs higher than their own…
In the book: Persepolis Marji and others are surrounded by oppression set upon them and they have to live their lives under the control of the Regime, The Shah, and being in the mix of a war between Iran and Iraq. Persepolis reflects on what happened during the Iranian Revolution, the way of life for people in Iran, and how the conflictual and corrupt state of Iran effected & changed the lives of many. Marji shows and tells us throughout the book her experiences she faces in being surrounded by oppression under the Islamic Regime, the Shah, during the Iranian revolution, and during the war between Iran and Iraq. Some characters in Persepolis never find freedom as the people are enclosed and limited by the unjust government. The only people…
The memoir Persepolis by Marjane Satrapi is about Marjane’s childhood in Iran written from her younger self’s perspective. It is taken place during the 1980’s during the time the Islamic Revolution is unfolding. Due to this, her childhood is intertwined with the collateral damage of war. Through the comic strip images, Satrapi reveals the ongoing oppression the country faces and the challenges she faces. Not only is her home place being invaded but her childhood is too. Satrapi is forced to grow up fairly quickly due to the country’s situation, at a very young age she witnesses things no child should witness. She learns quickly that she could not just sit and watch and takes the role of a social activist. She rebelled against what they are…
Overall Persepolis was a very interesting read. I sat down and read it over the course of four to five hours and did not find myself begging for the book to be over. The plot was interesting, and the character almost reminded me of the main character from the book Dear God, it's me Margaret, Are you There? This was comparable in multiple ways. Throughout the book the main character experiments with different genres, different ways of dressing and acting, before eventually settling down and deciding what she wants to do and what she wants to be. I liked the fact that this book dealt with many of the aspects of a girl blossoming into a woman, and really showed how people in Iran are a lot more advanced then they are made out to be by American media.…
Persepolis runs deeper than the historic background or Iranian culture Marjane Satrapi experienced throughout her childhood. Satrapi’s story exploits the idea of feminism and empowerment of women, while also touching on the topics of family, religion, drugs and alcohol, all ways of life that are experienced all too well by the average person. Although many people you ask on the street might say they have not had to endure to warfare, perhaps you have met someone who has served for your country, or a family member who involves themselves deeply in politics. Surely, these are two topics that are highly illuminated by Satrapi. The surface remains merely scratched if you look to see nothing but the life of Satrapi’s childhood- raised in a warzone-…
Although Simon and Marji had different views about freedom, they all agree that freedom is very important for people to have in their life.…
Also, throughout this interactive oral, I learnt that the whole book’s main goal is to send a message, Marjane’s transition from childhood to becoming a teenager. During the oral we proved this with many different parts of the first book of Persepolis, which was very interesting. For example, we noticed the way Marjane begins to lie to her parents as well as to the outside world. Or how she commonly as every teenager, tries to smoke a cigarette for the first time to rebel against her parents.…
There are many different themes and topics discussed in the book, Persepolis. Throughout the story, the main character, Marjane, gets older and begins to accept and be aware of the impacts of religion and social classes as she begins to lose her innocence and realize the world isn’t as peaceful as she thought it was.…
In Persepolis, the author Marjane Satrapi deals the feeling alienated by her own country, but also by any other country she tries to reside. She is to westernized for Iran, but to Iranian for the West, so she is constantly fighting with herself about who she really is and how she can deal with it. The whole point of this section is about Maji finally accepting who she is, after having struggling with it for the entire book. Her overall choice to finally get divorced was the first step in letting go of her futile attempts to conform to what society sees as “right” or “proper”. By not caring about what people were going to say to her or about her because she was a divorced women ( the way that they had done to her friend’s sister on page 332). She instead listened to her modern and logical grandma who said “the first marriage is a dry run for the second one” and in this way Marji seems to be reminded of just who she is; a girl who doesn’t care if she was thrown out of school, or ostracized by society as long as she could make her views known.…