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Marjane Satrapi's Persepolis

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In her autobiographical graphic novel, Persepolis: The Story of a Childhood, Marjane Satrapi tells of her childhood during the Islamic Revolution and the subsequent Iran-Iraq War. She lived in Tehran, Iran’s capital city, and was ten years old when the Shah fled Iran to escape the revolution. The 1979 revolution overturned the existing political order, thus creating what appeared to be an atmosphere for idealized social change and progress. The revolution was situated unquestionably in Marxist thought; it sought to establish the rule of the oppressed: to eradicate poverty, exploitation, and excessive wealth. However, Satrapi recognized the constraints she was living under. Under Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, she rebelled against the restrictions placed on young people, especially girls, and against the censorship of Western culture. Through Persepolis, Satrapi claims her own historicity in Iran, while at the same time works to “destabilize standard narratives of history” (Chute …show more content…

As the daughter of upper-class leftist parents, Marji’s political and social consciousness becomes grounded in her observations of her surroundings. She witnesses her parents’ protests against the Shah and later the Islamic regime; she hears about the torture and killing of family and friends; she is placed directly in the havoc wrecked by the Iran-Iraq War. While Marji’s developing consciousness is largely influenced by her parents, their efforts to protect her force her to develop a mindfulness based on her own experiences. She was born into a radical upper-class family, which gave her the advantage of an education on political issues, while at the same time allowed her to examine her atmosphere in way that differs from her parents. Marji’s growing awareness of class difference allows Persepolis to be considered through a Marxist-feminist

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