In the novel Persepolis the author Marjane Satrapi explains the life she endured growing up in Iran during the Islamic Revolution, and the war with Iraq. Satrapi is also an artist in this novel and uses simple cartoons to illustrate her often funny dialogue. While she uses humor all throughout the novel to tell her story, she also delves into a very serious subject matter that has a very somber tone. As an English teacher I find that this novel is one that could be used as a fun way to introduce graphic novels as a viable literature source. I do feel that it has more relativity to a history course though, because the subject matter is such an important time in history. However, I think that the two departments could work together to create an integrated lesson plan.
What Sartrapi does very well is use humor to lighten situations that are very dark for people who have not experienced something like torture, revolution, and repression. In one instance she is referring to torture, and she says “In the end he was cut to pieces.” (Sartrapi 52). The humor part is how she illustrates the picture of the victim and how he is severed at each limb in a very clean and orderly fashion which is not something you would expect from torture. She also uses her youth and inexperience to at times make fun of the repression her country is undergoing. In one instance she is talking to a little girl who is missing her father because he is “on a trip” (Sartrapi 48) and Marji replies to her that “don’t you know that when they keep saying someone is on a trip it really means he is dead? At least was the case with my grandpa.” (Sartrapi 48).
The problem I see with Persepolis is that it has not a lot of literary value as far as a real piece of literature. It has a very simple story telling style, and never really challenges the readers who are reading it. This is partly due to the simple nature of the narrator since she is a child, and also that it is a simple graphic novel with a story to tell, and not much of a way to challenge readers as far as thought provoking issues. The readers should already know that torture, murder, war and oppression are wrong. Something that would be more challenging would be a novel like The Watchmen which asks readers who actually watches the people who are in charge. While Persepolis only tells the overt story of a nation lost to an ideal that goes against freedom.
Overall the graphic novel is a good work that puts a face to a series of events that many people may not be familiar with. It would work well with paired with a history course, and give some students some valuable insight to world happenings. It may also have use as a good break for students in between works that are more challenging in the literary sense.
Works Cited
Satrapi, Marjane. Persepolis, Paris, France. Random House inc. 2003. Print