Persepolis is a story about Marjane Satrapi, her family, her friends, and the people she knows—and also about the nation of Iran. These two stories cannot be unspooled from each other—one cannot be told without the other, and no individual in the story can exist or be understood outside of the context of the historical change happening in Iran around him or her, no matter how much he or she might try. From the start, Marjane’s story is about how the individual engages with the political—as her parents demonstrate against the Shah during the Revolution—and how the political encroaches on the personal—as after the Revolution Marjane must suddenly wear the veil at school. Indeed, what Marjane at one point pinpoints as the source of the Revolution—class differences—she recognizes in her own family home: the family maid, Mehri, does not eat dinner at the table with them.
The question, then, becomes one of degrees: if one cannot escape the political in one’s life, how much should one participate in the political sphere, and does one actually have a choice in the matter? For the Satrapis, the question manifests itself in questions over how much risk they want to take to protect their rights—do they want to demonstrate and possibly be beaten, for example? The Satrapis' solution is to try to recede as much as they can, to appear like good citizens of the Islamic Republic even as they privately hold parties, make wine, and buy imported goods. Yet even these choices are political acts, as they are forbidden and might lead to arrest.
Though Marjane cannot outwardly rebel much beyond improperly covering her veil, she finds small ways to resist the oppressive rules imposed on her by the Islamic Republic. The personal and the political, then, become inexorably intertwined in Iran. To assert one’s individuality in clothing or spoken opinion becomes a political act. Furthermore, Marjane expresses that government policies really affect people’s behaviors: “It wasn’t only the government that changed. Ordinary people changed too. ” Under such a repressive regime, what once felt like an enormous separation between the public sphere and the private one considerably narrows. By the end of the graphic novel, Marjane’s mother is both covering the windows to protect against flying glass—a consequence of the ongoing warfare, indiscriminate in its destructiveness—and from the eyes of prying neighbors, who might inform the authorities about the family’s Western ways, which would be an individually targeted and motivated act.
Persepolis is a
story
about
Marjane
Satrapi
, her
family
, her friends, and the
people
she knows—and
also
about the nation of Iran. These two
stories
cannot be
unspooled
from each other—one cannot be
told
without the other, and no individual in the
story
can exist or
be understood
outside of
the context of the historical
change
happening in Iran around him or her, no matter how
much
he or she might try. From the
start
,
Marjane
’s
story
is about how the individual engages with the political—as her parents demonstrate against the Shah during the Revolution—and how the political encroaches on the personal—as after the Revolution
Marjane
must
suddenly
wear the veil at school.
Indeed
, what
Marjane
at one point pinpoints as the source of the Revolution—
class
differences—she recognizes in her
own
family
home: the
family
maid,
Mehri
, does not eat dinner at the table with them.
The question, then, becomes one of degrees: if one cannot escape the political in one’s life, how
much
should one participate in the political sphere, and does one actually have a choice in the matter? For the
Satrapis
, the question manifests itself in questions over how
much
risk
they want to take to protect their rights—do they want to demonstrate and
possibly
be beaten
,
for example
? The
Satrapis
' solution is to try to recede as
much
as they can, to appear like
good
citizens of the Islamic Republic even as they
privately
hold parties,
make
wine, and
buy
imported
goods
.
Yet
even these choices are political acts, as they
are forbidden
and might lead to arrest.
Though
Marjane
cannot
outwardly
rebel
much
beyond
improperly
covering her veil, she finds
small
ways to resist the oppressive
rules
imposed on her by the Islamic Republic. The personal and the political, then, become
inexorably
intertwined in Iran. To assert one’s individuality in clothing or spoken opinion becomes a political act.
Furthermore
,
Marjane
expresses that
government
policies
really
affect
people
’s behaviors: “It wasn’t
only
the
government
that
changed
. Ordinary
people
changed
too. ” Under such a repressive regime, what once felt like an enormous separation between the public sphere and the private one
considerably
narrows. By the
end
of the graphic novel,
Marjane
’s mother is both covering the windows to protect against flying glass—a consequence of the ongoing warfare, indiscriminate in its destructiveness—and from the eyes of prying neighbors, who might inform the authorities about the
family’s
Western ways, which would be an
individually
targeted and motivated act.