Persepolis: The Story of a Childhood
by Marjane Satrapi
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Read in March, 2004
Cultural relativists as far back as Sextus Empiricus or Michel Montaigne, or as recent as William Graham Sumner or Gilbert Harman, often make compelling arguments that there are no objective standards for judging other societies/beliefs. Yet Marjane Satrapi's Persepolis achieves in 153 pages what cultural relativists deny as possible and what most political pundits can never fully articulate: an informed and justifiable criticism of an existing cultural paradigm. Satrapi's method is deceptively ...more
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Read in March, 2008
I heard of 'Persepolis' amid the recent backdrop of U.S. threats against Iran, and was very impressed by the film. However, i came away feeling that now i didn't have to read the book; that i had probably experienced most of what the book had to offer. Yet, when discussing the film with those who had also read the book, without fail i was told the film is weighted toward's Satrapi's later life in 'Persepolis 2', and that enjoying the film is all the more reason to read 'Persepolis'. So, a fe...more
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biography,
comics
Read in January, 2006
They are among the rare books that I give a 5 which means:
a. they will come with me wherever I go
b. I will read them again and again until I remember every single sentence
c. I will not lend them to people :p.
Tita introduced me to these books. I have been very interested on Iran and was even contemplating to read the autobiography of Farah Pahlavi, the Empress of Iran. After repeated visits to the bookshop to flip the pages of this autobiography, I wasn't sure if I wanted to part with m...more
a. they will come with me wherever I go
b. I will read them again and again until I remember every single sentence
c. I will not lend them to people :p.
Tita introduced me to these books. I have been very interested on Iran and was even contemplating to read the autobiography of Farah Pahlavi, the Empress of Iran. After repeated visits to the bookshop to flip the pages of this autobiography, I wasn't sure if I wanted to part with m...more
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Read in May, 2008
I can certainly see why Satrapi's graphic novel has received such high praise from such high places. Her art is primitive, yet sometimes exotic, as when she depicts the republican protestors of the Shah's era as repeating a motif of the same drowsy mustachioed man. These panels remind of something out of Martin Ramirez, but more controlled, less schizophrenic. At other times, her broad swathes of black and thick white lines remind me of Picasso - her forced perspective like pottery decoration...more
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Read in August, 2005
Fun story about this book...
Back in the day, I used to frequent the message board of writer Brian K. Vaughan (Y: The Last Man, Ex Machina). I was something of a regular. Well, back in early 2005, BKV sold or optioned the film rights for Y, and as a treat to the loyal Caballeros (as we were called on the BKV Cabal) he and comic co-creator Pia Guerra decided to use some of their movie cash to buy pretty much everyone on the boards one graphic novel of their choice from a list of ten over-looked g...more
Back in the day, I used to frequent the message board of writer Brian K. Vaughan (Y: The Last Man, Ex Machina). I was something of a regular. Well, back in early 2005, BKV sold or optioned the film rights for Y, and as a treat to the loyal Caballeros (as we were called on the BKV Cabal) he and comic co-creator Pia Guerra decided to use some of their movie cash to buy pretty much everyone on the boards one graphic novel of their choice from a list of ten over-looked g...more
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bookshelves:
educateyourself,
graphicnovels
Read in January, 2004
recommends it for:
Americans, women, Republicans
I am as middle class (we call it affectionately, the "poor rich" where I live.) I am intellectual. I am like Richard Rodriquez and bellhooks because education took me away from my roots, but gave me who I am today.
So, how could Iranian middle class intellectuals and professionals in the late 1970s have been so different than me and my family? For the young, under the Shah, there was a strong and progressive, very Western group of middle class Iranians. Just like me and mine.
So,...more
So, how could Iranian middle class intellectuals and professionals in the late 1970s have been so different than me and my family? For the young, under the Shah, there was a strong and progressive, very Western group of middle class Iranians. Just like me and mine.
So,...more
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Read in April, 2008
recommended to Leslie by:
book group
It’s hard to believe that Satrapi can convey any joy or humor in the face of Iran’s increasingly repressive political climate during the early 1980s, but indeed she does, in the character of Marji, whose thirst for knowledge is indefatigable. At first Marji’s parents shield her, forbidding her to go with them to demonstrations against the shah, but soon enough, Marji sees for herself what happens to her friends’ parents, and her parent’s friends and relatives.
One of the most heart...more
One of the most heart...more
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womens-literature,
world-literature,
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Read in March, 2008
recommended to Krista by:
Maryl
Marjane Satrapi's Persepolis is an autobiographical account of the author life, from about age 6 to age 14, growing up in 1960's Tehran during the Islamic Revolution and the beginnings of the war between Iran and Iraq. Critically, Satrapi's graphic novel has also been praised and compared to Spiegelman's Maus.
To reflect the youth and naiveté of her younger protagonist "self", Satrapi's story is laid out in larger and more simplistic panels, though the individual frames are still v...more
To reflect the youth and naiveté of her younger protagonist "self", Satrapi's story is laid out in larger and more simplistic panels, though the individual frames are still v...more
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biography-memoir,
comics-graphic-novels,
persia-iran
Read in September, 2004
recommends it for:
Anyone Interested in Modern Iran, Graphic Art Lovers
A compelling memoir of growing up in Iran during the Islamic Revolution, Marjane Satrapi's "Persepolis" is both a moving portrait of one young girl's life, and a keenly-observed record of the political and religious events unfolding in her country. The author chronicles her family's initial jubilation at the fall of the brutal and corrupt regime of the Shah, their dismay at the growing repressiveness of the new theocracy, and their suffering (along with their countrymen) during the Ira...more
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Read in February, 2008
recommended to Austin by:
A Lot Of People, Some Good, Some Badrecommends it for: Current Events Fans
Chances are if you're interested in reading Persepolis, you probably already know what it's about. It's this kind of reputation that made me hesitant to read it; how many times have we been burned by something that had been hyped before? It's a lesson we learn over and over in our lives, despite wanting to believe otherwise.
Fortunately, Persepolis is pretty impressive in spite of it's reputation. The style and form of the writing and art is focused with a kind of accuracy ...more
Fortunately, Persepolis is pretty impressive in spite of it's reputation. The style and form of the writing and art is focused with a kind of accuracy ...more
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Read in December, 2007
During the same time I was reading "Fun Home, a Family Tragicomic" I was also reading "Persepolis" by Marjane Satrapi.
It is interesting that both graphic novels are two women looking back on their childhood and the chaos that surrounded it. Granted "Fun Home" is very private and personal while "Persepolis" is looking at Iranian society after the revolution that disposed the Shah.
"Persepolis" caught my attention due its stark black and w...more
It is interesting that both graphic novels are two women looking back on their childhood and the chaos that surrounded it. Granted "Fun Home" is very private and personal while "Persepolis" is looking at Iranian society after the revolution that disposed the Shah.
"Persepolis" caught my attention due its stark black and w...more
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Read in December, 2007
I got this book in Arabic. Any one who is interrested could borrow it from me (if you are in Jeddah that is!)
أنهيت قراءة الكتاب ليس لأني سريعة في القراءة و ليس لأنه كتب بالعربية و لكن لأسباب أخرى؛ أولها أننا كنا في الطائرة ننتظر مكان للوقوف لمدة ساعة تقريبا(بسسب الحجاج رعاهم الله) و ثانيا لأن الكتاب مصور! أكثر ما شدني في ا...more
أنهيت قراءة الكتاب ليس لأني سريعة في القراءة و ليس لأنه كتب بالعربية و لكن لأسباب أخرى؛ أولها أننا كنا في الطائرة ننتظر مكان للوقوف لمدة ساعة تقريبا(بسسب الحجاج رعاهم الله) و ثانيا لأن الكتاب مصور! أكثر ما شدني في ا...more
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absolutely-must-read,
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Read in March, 2008
recommends it for:
sab, leigh, cate, micole
so the art is simple and perfect for the story. the story, the characters, the setting, the fact that this is a memoir - sometimes i wonder why anyone tries to write a traditional memoir when they could use the graphic novel form.
what i love most about this book is that the art is somewhat true to life - there are no allegorical illustrations of cats and mice, and there's no need to make the story seem more tragic by super depressing illustrations, or somehow more accessible by making it se...more
what i love most about this book is that the art is somewhat true to life - there are no allegorical illustrations of cats and mice, and there's no need to make the story seem more tragic by super depressing illustrations, or somehow more accessible by making it se...more
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Read in February, 2008
I like graphic novels. However, when I opened this b&w book and saw four little girls all in veil, I wondered how I was going to remember or distinguish all the characters, let alone follow the story. Well, it wasn't hard given that the tale followed one of them mostly. The illustration has a stronger character and feel to it than most graphic novels- almost unpretty. And the subject matter- a nation's metamorphosis as seen through the eyes of a growing child- makes one appreciate what a...more
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Read in December, 2007
recommends it for:
everyone, especially George W. Bush
Marjane Satrapi was ten-years-old when the Islamic revolution took away her freedom and rights, thrusting Iran back into the Dark Ages. Through simple but elegant illustrations, Satrapi tells the story of her childhood in Tehran during this time in her country's history. She shows the horrors and deprivations caused by the rise of religious extremists, as well as the bitter humour and courage that each ordinary citizen found to survive such a period.
The amazing thing about this graphic nove...more
The amazing thing about this graphic nove...more
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Read in August, 2007
recommends it for:
anyone
Another graphic memoir, this one about the Islamic Revolution in Iran in the 80s. A look at the complicated politics of the middle east through the eyes of a child who lived it, which makes it digestible -- we get the pieces in "child-size" doses, but what is happening is not child-sized at all. We watch Marjane go through the regular rigors of coming of age even as the world around her changes and her family needs to go further and further underground as the government gets more and m...more
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Read in November, 2007
recommends it for:
Everyone
I heart this book. I really do! Marjane Satrapi is now formally included on the list of women that I admire and strive to emulate. There is an animated film version of this graphic novel series that will be released in the U.S. this Christmas. Its been getting a lot of hype, so I decided to check it out. I couldn't put it down, and now I'm hunting down the next one! This story is hilarious, heart-warming, heart-wrenching, and extremely educational to someone like me who knows little about the po...more
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Read in October, 2006
This book was not at all what I expected -- it was so much more. Normally, I have a large amount of disdain for stories told form the child's persepctive, for I find the children to be a little too wise, a little too precoscious (I know it's spelled wrong, but it's late and I'm lazy), a little too learned, a little too in tune with their fate, etc. (think Mary Anton in "The Promised Land" -- to this day, it is the most tedious piece of self-indulgent crap I ever had to read and the on...more
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Read in February, 2008
I do love a good politically conscious graphic novel. In this one, Marjane grows up in Tehran, before and after the Iranian revolution. Starts off as a girl who believes that she was the next prophet, reads comics about dialectic materialism and can't decide whether she should follow God or Marx. After the revolution in 1979 her liberal family are forced to (outwardly) follow the doctrines of Iranian fundamentalists, she has to wear a headscarf and is picked up by vigilantes for wearing a denim ...more
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eyeopening
Read in January, 2008
Although not as riveting as Maus by Art Spiegelman, this stark memoir resonates with the small moments of everyday life seen from a child's point of view. I found the narrator fascinating and her retelling of scenes such as the burning of 400 people in a locked from the outside movie theater arresting. Her simple pictrues are as horrifying in the black and white of Satrapi's illustrations as any piece of revolutionary art from a studied painter's stance. In a way, I was reminded of Picasso's G...more
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