preview

Marjane Satrapi's Persepolis

Decent Essays
Open Document

The historical synopsis of Persepolis shows the depiction of Iranians and of the battles they encountered, and are still experiencing, in post-revolutionary Iran. Persepolis makes essential pace toward transforming how Western audience discerns Iranians. Persepolis gives readers a glance at how life is like in Iran, however, people base their impression of different countries on what the media reports. Sadly, the notion of Iranians is usually adverse and associated with fundamentalism, terrorism, and fanaticism. Marjane Satrapi’s Persepolis recounts her childhood days in Iran as an innocent child, striving to comprehend the changes happening in her homeland due to consequences of the Islamic Revolution in 1979. Satrapi’s innocence gives the …show more content…

Throughout the novel, Satrapi shows how Iran was, before and after the Islamic revolution. Evidently, an Iranian shown in the novel wears western style clothing (36), to show he’s rebellious. Because Satrapi wears western style clothing, Satrapi cites that she identifies as a person of modernity. Nonetheless, she manipulates the reader to see that the Iran society is similar to that of the western society. Furthermore, Satrapi presents the western culture in the novel as part of the Iranian society; the Iranian fundamentalists see the western culture as “symbols of capitalism” (4) and therefore places a ban on it. For the minority in Iran, embracing this foreign culture is a way of rebelling against the Islamic regime. This demonstration of Western culture allows Satrapi to manipulate the reader into believing that Iranians are culturally diverse and relate with the battles Iranians …show more content…

Although Satrapi and her family are from the middle class, most of her family members went through torture and death in the hands of the government. The day she hears about her grandfather’s torture in prison filled with water, she takes a long bath to know how her grandfather endured in a water filled prison. This exemplifies that Satrapi is compassionate as she wants to encounter the feelings and the agony that fellow Iranians went through. Likewise, after the bath, she states "My hands were wrinkled when I came out, like grandpas" (Satrapi 25). Again, Satrapi experiences her grandfather’s endurances in the water filled prison. Similarly, her uncle Anoosh suffered similar faith and eventually got executed on the accusations of being a Russian spy. Another example is where Satrapi shows the audience how young boys get convinced and sent to the battlefield on promises of going to heaven with a “golden key to unlock the heaven door” and become martyrs when they

Get Access