Liberal Views in the Ruins of War in Marjane Satrapi Persepolis
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Liberal Views in the Ruins of War in Marjane Satrapi’s Persepolis
To know one’s identity is to find the core aspects that make them who they are. This includes the positive and negative experiences that shapes one’s identity and strengthens those aspects. This idea leads to ponder, how one identifies themselves in such a structured society. In the novel Persepolis the author Marjane Satrapi express her life in an autobiographical graphic novel. She describes her experience of being brought up in war-torn Iran. Though it is her struggle to grow an identity as a liberal self during the revolution, will be concentrated.
Living in the heat of a revolution Marji (name of main character) and her family were subjectively forced to liberate themselves from radical change. Their admiration was to find liberty. Writer Raymond Williams describes the word liberty as having this initial sense of freedom. Also considered as open-minded, which some political officials classify as unorthodox. This definition it practically true when referring to Persepolis. The start of the Islamic revolution brought about many restraint. Such as, the Islamic regime forcing female citizens to wear a veil (traditional head scarf). As a young girl Marji was did not understand the reason for wearing the veil. She goes on to illustrating the image of herself and other girls removing the veils and playing with them. However, her mother protested the veil believed to be a torment to their freedom. But, her mother also felt the intensity of not wearing the veil. An incident took place were two guys threated the rape of women who did not. Fundamentalists that believed in the regimes efforts thought, that the hair of women were tempting to men. In this case the veil embodies suppression and confinement. Satrapi acknowledged how the Iranian government used the veil to control people and push citizens into