Images In Persepolis

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Graphic images affect how any reader sees or reads an image. In a book where a character gets beat up, a bloody image will affect the reader more than an image where there is no blood. Marjane Satrapi’s use of graphic images in her book, “Persepolis”, affect how the reader sees social classes, loss of innocence and gender roles in Iranian culture. One might think a situation is not a big deal, but when a graphic image portrays the situation, a reader truly sees the importance of the situation. In the book, “Persepolis”, one major theme throughout is social classes. In the image, it demonstrates the theme by describing social classes within a high school setting. High school social classes are a bit different than Iranian social classes though.…show more content…
In the image, it demonstrates the theme by showing a man who is working and a women cooking, cleaning and caring for the children. Historically, it was the man’s job to work and provide for the family, while it was the woman's job to cook, clean and care for the children. A lot has changed since that was the norm and today it is a lot different, in some cases flip flopped. However, as expressed in the book, it is not that way in Iran. Throughout the book, women are treated as if they are beneath men. On page 6, Marjane is telling the prophets, in a dream, that she is the next prophet and they are scoffing at her because she is a women. Two pages later she tells her class she wants to be a prophet and everyone laughs at her because she is a women (8 Satrapi). Throughout the book women are treated terribly, they are called horrible names. On page 74, she describes something that happened to her mother, she refused to wear the veil and when her car broke down, she was thrown against the wall and treated horribly by two fundamentalist men (Satrapi). Those men were not arrested and women were then forced to wear the veil (74 Satrapi). The graphic images attached to the situation with her mother really show the true nature of gender roles in Iranian culture. In conclusion, Marjane Satrapi’s use of graphic images in her coming of age story, “Persepolis”, accurately depicts social classes, loss of innocence and gender roles. Graphic

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