Lolita In Tehran

1565 Words4 Pages

Individuals’ experiences are influenced by culture. The western pharmaceutical companies and Islamic government (be specific) want to accomplish their goals through influencing the attitudes inside the public’s minds. In the essay, “The Mega-Marketing of Depression in Japan”, Ethan Watters talks about the Western pharmaceutical companies have a deep research on depression and tend to transform the knowledge into power to launch their anti-depression drugs in Japan, but people in Japan do not treat depression as a disease. As a result, these pharmaceutical companies tend to change individuals’ attitudes about depression in Japan to accomplish their goals. Similarly, in the essay “Selections from Reading Lolita in Tehran”, Azar Nafisi describes
Most people think knowledge represents power because they can have full control on the situation, while misknowledge is weakness since they cannot analyze the unfamiliar situation properly. However, misknowledge provides individuals an opportunity to find out what is correct behind it. As Thurman says, “we think that finding ourselves in the wrong means a loss of power and safety, forgetting that actually it is the only way for us to discover what is truly right and truly wrong, thereby gaining real power and real safety” (446). The phrase “loss of power and safety” indicates being right is very important for people, because right can bring them power and reputation. They can have a full control of the situation and avoid the potential risk. Being wrong, misknowledge, is supposed to make people in trouble. However, people can find out in which steps they are wrong that lead to misknowledge. Then they can gain new knowledge from it and avoid the wrong steps again, and hence maintain their power and safety in the future. The concept of misknowledge can apply to the western medical companies. They advertise in their websites that an imbalance of serotonin level inside the brain leads to depression, and the antidepressants can help people recover from it. According to the research, the antidepressants have no effect on serotonin level. As Watters says, “The idea that SSRIs restore a natural balance of serotonin is a theory without evidence. Put another way, this idea is more of a culturally shared story than a scientific fact” (529). The medical companies spread out misknowledge to the public, and it leads to normal people in wrong position where they give in and believe the antidepressants can help them recover from the depression. After they find out the truth, they gain knowledge of the relationship between antidepressants and serotonin.

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