"Marjane Satrapi" Essays and Research Papers

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    The authors of Peras: an Extract from a Page‚ and Sleeping with the Dictionary‚ use their writing to discuss textual consciousness and what takes place during the reading of a piece. McCaffery’s experimental text‚ Peras: an Extract from a Page‚ introduces the idea of the page as an autonomous being that is launched into a schizophrenic state of self-loathing when written or inscribed upon. Within this text‚ the reader is characterized as an inconsequential witness to the madness of the page. McCaffery

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    2010 that have died from violence during the Iraq war. Marjane Satrapi sympathizes with these people and their families. She is against the war and tries to spread the word to her readers. In 2005 Satrapi was invited to speak at West Point‚ a military base that was required to read her novel Persepolis. She describes what she thought the trip would be like before and after it occurred in a comic strip called My Speech at West Point. Satrapi perceptibly addresses the issues of war‚ death‚ and insularity

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    all kinds of stereotypes. This occurrence‚ however‚ is clearly recognized by a Muslim author named Marjane Satrapi. In her graphic novel‚ Persepolis‚ Satrapi illustrates her story of living in Iran as a discreet revolutionist child going against the Fundamentalists’ throughout the Islamic Revolution. Proving Iran’s image of having connections with fundamentalism‚ fanaticism‚ and terrorism false‚ Satrapi successfully sheds light upon her subversion to Western stereotypes about Muslims through the use

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    Marjane

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    Both Joan Didion in “on How to keep a notebook‚” and Scott Silver in 8 mile create works that provide a blueprint on how writing can build one’s self. In ON how to keep a notebook‚ Didion explains how writing helps to organize her thought and have something to look back upon at a later time in life. In 8 mile the protagonist Rabbit‚ also writes to express his thoughts‚ allowing writing to be an escape from the stressors that constantly surround him in his daily life. In both stores‚ writing helps

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    “Nothing of me is original. I am the combined effort of everyone I’ve ever known.” (Palahniuk) In Persepolis‚ Marjane Satrapi undergoes magnificent changes on her way to adulthood as she encounters the love of family‚ the horrors of war‚ heartbreak‚ drugs‚ loneliness‚ alienation‚ oppression‚ marriage and divorce‚ accomplishment‚ and autonomy. Satrapi’s identity is formed by her childhood in Iran and solidified by her path to maturity through Austria and a return to Iran that are intertwined with

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    stays true to the overall tone and style of the graphic novel‚ however‚ its intention is slightly different. Marjane Satrapi’s graphic novel‚ Persepolis‚ uses real events and real personal experiences

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    Marjane Identity Changes

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    Marjane was always curious especially during the Iranian Revolution. From becoming expelled‚ losing many loved ones‚ and finding out where she is as a person‚ Marjane went through numerous hard times. Marjane’s identity changes after her Uncle Anoosh gets executed‚ when she sees violence for the first time‚ and when she is sent off to Austria. In particular‚ Marjane’s identity changes after her Uncle Anoosh is executed. Marjane loved her beloved Uncle Anoosh. When she had her last few moments with

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    thing that people need to earn and fight for; without it‚ there will be many restrictions. For example‚ many people suffer after the Revolution in Iran‚ Satrapi started telling about some of their struggles: “...the government had imprisoned and executed so many high school and college students that we no longer talked politics” (Marjane Satrapi 84). This is showing how the students of different ages stood up to a law to make some changes. Other people did not keep on fighting‚ but instead‚ they

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    Whitfield Logan English 102 Ighade 4-7-14 Cultural Acceptance in Persepolis Marjane Satrapi‘s graphic novel Persepolis is an autobiography that depicts her childhood up to her early adult years in Iran during and after the Islamic revolution. Throughout the novel Satrapi incorporates character development‚ religion‚ and the conflict of freedom vs. confinement in order to develop a greater appreciation between two opposing eastern and western cultures. When analyzing the current relationship

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    transition into the person I am today. Bullies illustrates my discovery of those who inflict harm through a nightmarish memory of childhood bullying‚ and the intense suffering I endured. To depict this‚ I emulated the graphic novel Persepolis‚ by Marjane Satrapi in my work. Specifically‚ drawing upon the first person narration of a child‚ seen throughout Persepolis‚ compounded by the unrefined‚ child-like voiceover handwriting‚ forming a voice for the protagonist’s fragile‚ callow

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