Hello everyone! This week in my ASTU class I read the graphic narrative Persepolis by Marjane Satrapi. After seeing we were going to be reading a comic book for my first university reading ever, I have to say I didn’t know what to expect. However, I was quickly enthralled by the story. The relationship Marji had with her parents moved me. I’m not afraid to admit I teared up at the end as Marji left her parents for possibly the last time.
Some things I really loved about the story were the powerful illustrations. A constant I noticed was Satrapi’s abstract drawings of mass death. This can be seen on page 15 and page 102. Satrapi’s method of drawing the bodies in a very uniform and spiritual way forces the reader into reacting more intensely. The frame on page 102 particularly “got me” in that Satrapi drew the young boys killed in battle blown up holding their “keys to heaven” close to me. The fact that the Regime tricked young boys into fighting and ultimately dying for an absurd cause makes my blood boil.
It’s that feeling that you get- the feeling of “blood boiling”- that I think makes this story so impactful. Despite this being a comic book, and seemingly child-friendly, Satrapi did not shy away from being graphic, detailed and dark. The more I read about different characters doing terrible and awful things to innocent people the more angry and upset I got, and thus the more I invested myself in the story. Before reading Persepolis I had very little knowledge on the history of Iran and Iraq in the late 1970s and early 1980s. Now, I can say I’m educated on it (with a little more research on my own) and I can further understand the future and current issues going on in the area.
I think this all ties back into being a global citizen. Persepolis was chosen for my curriculum because the professors knew that it would stir a reaction in me and my classmates. This brilliant graphic narrative further pushes me to strive to impact our world for the better.
-Ben Ross
Works Cited:
Satrapi, Marjane. Persepolis. New York, NY: Pantheon, 2003. Print.