Wednesday, September 18, 2019
The Complexity of Marjane Satrapis Persepolis Essay -- Muslim Women
If a person were to hastily flip through the pages of Marjane Satrapiââ¬â¢s graphic  novel Persepolis, using only eyes to judge, the book could easily be put off as just  another piece of literary fluff. Their inner literary critic might utter a perplexed gasp and  their mind might reel with the wonder at how they happened upon something that was  surely intended for the childrenââ¬â¢s comic book section. With any further examination of  the bookââ¬â¢s literary content and the power of its simplified artwork, however, such an easy  to assume accusation shows through as fatally incorrect. Persepolis is the memoir of a  young woman growing up in the decimating national conflicts of 1970s Iran depicted  alongside an unexpectedly, simplified artwork style. At first it may appear that this is  done only for the sake of unique marketability or because it is merely Satrapiââ¬â¢s natural  drawing style. A deeper examination, however, will reveal that ââ¬Å"â⬠¦a form of  amplification through simplificationâ⬠ (McCloud, 30) is achieved and visual support is  given to the text in a manner that realistic or more ââ¬Å"seriousâ⬠ art could not accomplish.  Though simplified in its artistic approach, Persepolis is anything but simplified in  content.    When a writer chooses to include illustrations in a piece of literature, the first task  is to decide the level of abstraction/ realism the art will present. In Persepolisââ¬â¢ case, a  simplified art style works best, as it amplifies only the primary features of the text, unlike  realism which would be far more focused on social details. Given the bookââ¬â¢s heavy  subject matter (of both a war beyond massive devastation and the metamorphosis of a girl   caught in its trauma), Persepolis has a great deal of information to cover in t...              ...captivating   and personally significant aspects of her experience. Through generality and a lack of  explicit realism, Satrapi invigorates the bookââ¬â¢s deeper messages in a manner that extends  beyond the written word and into conceptual imagery. ââ¬Å"By de-emphasizing the  appearance of the physical worldâ⬠¦the cartoon places itself in the world of conceptsâ⬠  (McCloud 41), concepts that convey the subjective, but still far too true life of Marjane  Satrapi. This simplified and symbolic universe is not Iran or Austria or France; it is Marjaneââ¬â¢s Persepolis.         Works Cited    McCloud, Scott. Understanding Comics: The Invisible Art. New York: HyperCollins  Publishers, 1993. Print    Strapi, Marjane. Persepolis: The Story of Childhood. Paris, France: Lââ¬â¢Association, 2003. Print.    Strapi, Marjane. Persepolis 2: The Story of Return. Paris, France: Lââ¬â¢Association, 2004.Print                        
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