Persepolis 2
A number of
people noted how it was easy to just pass right on to Persepolis 2 without
really realizing it, because of the way Satrapi’s stories flowed so well
together. I agree, but I also found that there was a distinct difference in her
tone throughout the second story. First and foremost there was far less of her
childhood finger pointing and statement making that I thought very aptly
illustrated her sense of youthful idealism and willingness to believe
whole-heartedly in causes such as the Revolution. Persepolis 2 was, even in the
title, the story of a life in turmoil alongside a suffering country; the fact
that she and Iran are physically separated does not detract from the same sort
of parallelism that characterized “The Story of a Childhood.” From the very
first page it was obvious that her move to Europe in hopes of this renewing
freedom was also representative of its own sort of idealism: from the tone of
the narrator’s voice, it’s clear that the ideas and images of greener pastures
were, really, ideas and not reality: “I had come here with the idea of leaving a religious Iran for an open and secular
Europe…” Satrapi’s story in Austria was far bigger than homesickness, although
that was obviously an element. Once again, from the first frame, there is
already a pervading sense of isolation and foreignness both on her part and
that of the new country. Because of Persepolis I, it was hard to really read
Satrapi as the foreigner in this second story- it really felt like Europe was
what was foreign. Her childhood had been so defined by Iran that it was at
first difficult to understand her place in this country so different from her
home and the story of the Revolution. (Just a brief note that I enjoyed how
Satrapi’s sense of humor came into these circumstances of being an outsider and
so obviously not “fitting” in on the inside or the outside: on pg. 20, in the
sixth frame, she’s walking to the store in a full ski suit and looks like an
astronaut compared to the very European-looking woman passing her. She says, “I
felt like I was on the slopes of Innsbruck, close to my friends,” when really
she’s nowhere close to them, and the ski suit sort of symbolizes that.) But her
home followed her to Europe in a lot of ways, because had it not been for the
intense idea of home, culture, and origins brought about by childhood in Iran
and influenced by the Revolution, her assimilation would most likely have been
easier and not as burdened by guilt. The theme of guilt was new to Persepolis
2: her perspective on home, identity, and conflict are widened and once again
ultimately are defined by the Revolution. It seemed like the conflict at home
was the reason for her guilt, because she left before being able to really form
her own perceptions of the events and feel the effects for herself. That sense
of “unfinished business” is, in my opinion, largely the cause of her alienation
and lack of identity. One of the blog prompts has to do self-destructiveness
vs. the destructiveness of war, and I think that Satrapi’s struggle with identity
is perhaps a not as obvious result of the war in Iran. It seemed that it was
because she left when she did that her identity with her own country was not
fully formed yet, so it makes sense that it would be so difficult to start all
over in such a drastically new place, and all alone on top of that. On pg. 39,
in the height of her punk style, she imagines herself running away from the
outline of her parents, highlighting the inner conflict between the two parts
of her: the part that is loyal to home, but who is also attempting to be the
free person her parents sacrificed so much for her to be but who she doesn’t
really know how to be…When she leaves
at the end of Persepolis 2, there is not the same tone of sadness and grief at
departure because she understands more, having gone back and seen the
circumstances for herself. As she says in the last frame, freedom really does
come at a cost, no matter where she is in her life or what her relationship to
that freedom is. This isn’t something that is revealed to the reader just at
the very end of this story, but rather throughout both part 1 and 2. Neither
would have been possible without Iran, to end on the idea of parallelism once
again.
Thanks for your comments, Lucy. I totally agree with you--there was an overt difference in tonality in Persepolis II, and it was so different that I felt like I was reading a sequel. When I watched the movie, they tied the whole narrative together and I couldn't help but compare it to the comic--it felt way too fast in the film version. There is definitely a cyclicality to the novel (the use of the departure at the airport in the end), and an overarch that ties the narrative together.
ReplyDeleteI haven't seen the movie, and I admit I'm nervous to in case it presents a different interpretation! :) Anyways, the way you mentioned tying the narrative together, did it feel in the movie like an artificial tying together, like Satrapi intended her novels to have a distinct tonality? It seems like that would make sense, because she's grown and matured and formed so much by Persepolis 2... The cyclicality you mention seems like the perfect middle ground to tie the two storie together, so that they really don't necessarily have to flow perfectly. Thanks for the comment!
ReplyDeleteHer identity struggle comes from so many angles. Her family is non-conforming from the get go--an american car? a mother who is secular? all confusing in a pretty monotheist country? then she goes to europe. I do agree that the war pushes her into a behavior that is out there and an identity crisis along with all the other circumstances.
ReplyDeleteyou will be surprised the that the movie doesn't deviate too much
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