Gender Stereotypes In Marjane Satrapi's Persepolis

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The graphic memoir Persepolis, by Marjane Satrapi, gave me better interpretation of life during the Islamic Revolution or current lifestyle. Female Muslims were looked down upon if they didn’t follow the stereotypical characteristic of the revolution. The protagonist in the memoir, Marji, played between being a traditional and a westernized girl. It hard for females to express themselves in their daily lives with the rules of the revolution. On the other hand, male Muslims weren’t as sheltered in society’s eyes. Being an American and Muslims are two totally different lifestyles. It’s hard to wrap my head around how my life would have been like if I lived in Iran instead.
In the graphic memoir there were ideological signs for fundamentalists and modern men and woman. Marji had an even balance of both of these types. At …show more content…

She doesn’t take the traditional side too seriously though. At school she often goofs around like any kid would and doesn’t follow the rules of the revolution. The graphic memoir had a tier of panels of when Marji wore a bracelet that she received from her mom to school. At school she has to wear the whole fundamentalist wardrobe. The teacher told the whole class that, from a dialogue bubble, “I’ve told you a hundred times that it is strictly forbidden to wear jewelry and jeans”. Marji decided not to follow that rule and wear her bracelet to school. The teacher saw and told she didn’t want to see it again. So the next day Marji wore it again. The teacher and her started to argue about it and Marji got really angry and slapped her teacher. She was expelled from the school and was forced to go to a new one (143). Again, girls were able to express themselves and be unique. Marji’s perspective of everything is sort of different than everyone else’s in Iran. She doesn’t care how people see her in and does whatever childlike things she wants. Untraditionally, she goes against the

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