Thursday, November 6, 2014

Review: Persepolis

Persepolis
By Marjane Satrapi
Pantheon June 2004
160 pages
Borrowed from my sister

Persepolis: The Story of a Childhood (Persepolis, #1-2)


Persepolis is a graphic novel that details one girl's experiences during the Islamic revolution in Iran during the 1970s and 1980s. Marjane recounts the juxtaposition of growing up in the home of Marxist protesters in a nation where having a divergent opinion was enough to get you killed. She lives with the threat of prison or death for her parents and for their friends. This book shows the reader both the terrible costs of repression and war and the way that life continues even under the most unimaginable of circumstances. 

The author made a great choice to first show the reader Marjane as a child and then as a young woman, which allows us to learn right along with her. Her first notion that something has changed in her country is the day that she must wear the veil to school. Her parents educate her about what is happening and we get a mini history lesson too. As she gets older and forms her own opinions, her parents become fearful. Marjane is outspoken and passionate and her parents grapple with the difficult decision to allow her to stay in her home and face the danger there or leave the country and find safety.

Reading Persepolis opened my eyes to two things. First, I realized just how little I know about modern history in nations other than my own. It's easy to stop with your school-mandated history and your knowledge of the Renaissance in Europe or the terrible toll of the world wars. But it takes effort to remain informed about the things happening around the world in your lifetime and what happened during the decades before you were born. I also found out that I had a sort of skewed understanding of the kind of stories you can find in a graphic novel. I expected that most comics involved superheroes or retellings of popular science fiction stories. But many writers, including Marjane Satrapi, use comics to bring their own personal histories to life. Graphic novels are a unique way to convey a story and it gives the storyteller a different set of tools. In Persepolis, Satrapi showed the bleakness of living in Iran by creating images in solely black and white.

Persepolis is both universal and specific. Those of us living in the US have no idea what it is like to live under a repressive regime. But we do know about growing up and deciding which things we want to keep from our parent's teaching and which things we forge our own opinions about. Marjane Satrapi picked a powerful medium to convey her memories of becoming her own person in a dangerous time and place. 



What is your favorite graphic novel?

14 comments:

  1. This was my first graphic novel as well and like you I found it so eye opening! Now welcome to the big (sometimes secret) world of graphic memoirs! Next up: Maus (both parts)--it's the author's biography of his father who was a Jew in Nazi Europe (I think Poland but I'm not positive now). Fun Home by Alison Bechdel is also one of my favorites--deals with her relationship with her father as well as her coming out as a lesbian in her young adulthood.

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    1. It does seems kind of secret, doesn't it? I'm glad to have joined the club though!

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  2. I will have to read this. It sounds wonderful!

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    1. I hope you find it as interesting as I did!

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  3. I haven't read a lot of graphic novels (although this summer I did read The Odyssey in graphic novel form), but I'd like to read more of them. This one sounds like a good one. I find the culture of Iran so foreign and so fascinating. Have you ever read that book Reading Lolita in Tehran by Azar Nafisi? It offers an interesting insider's view of Iran (and talks about some great books, too).

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    1. I read Lolita in Tehran back before I started blogging. I definitely need to diversify my reading, though. I've read so few books about the Middle East.

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  4. I read this a while back and really enjoyed it. I know there's a second volume as well, but I haven't gotten around to that one yet.

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    1. I read that lot of people liked the second volume even more than the first.I'm going to keep my eye out for it!

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  5. Oh, I'm glad you read it! Yes, it's so wonderful, isn't it? It led me to reading some other memoirs by Iranian and Iranian-American women--I am going to do a post on that next week for Nonfiction November.

    And I echo Trish on Maus--fantastic! I would like to find some additional graphic memoirs or novels to read, because I haven't read many more than Persepolis and Maus.

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    1. I will definitely have to check out your post. I would love to read other books by Iranian authors!

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  6. I've also realized that I don't know much about modern history in other countries! In fact, I've basically covered American history and ancient history in my classes, nothing else. I'd like to pick this up to learn more :)

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    1. How does that happen? I feel like I need a crash course in the history of the past 50 years outside of the US!

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  7. This is one of only two graphic novels that I've ever read (Maus being the other one), but they were both so outstanding that it leaves me wondering this: why don't I read more graphic novels when what I've experienced has been so good? It's like a have a strange resistance to them.

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    1. I never remember to look for them! I honestly can't tell you if my branch of the library has any...

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