This week I chose to continue delving into primary sources
in terms of my I-Search. Rather than
investigating tools used for teaching graphic novels, however, I looked into a
specific graphic novel that is “canonized” in some ways as a graphic novel “worth
teaching” in schools. Persepolis, by Marjane Satrapi, is an
autobiographical graphic novel that was originally composed in French, and it tells
the story of Marjane as a 10-year-old girl in the midst of the Islamic
Revolution in Iran in the early 1980’s.
Persepolis is
beautifully written and illustrated, and for those reasons alone it is certainly
worth teaching to students as a work of literature. I feel that the novel could also be useful,
however, for several more specific and more curriculum-based reasons.
The autobiographical form is something that I feel receives
too little attention in schools. What better
way to introduce the autobiography as literature than through something as
approachable and non-threatening (in terms of actual verbal language) as a
graphic novel? For this reason, it would
also be useful and interesting to introduce the idea of students writing their
own autobiographies. Every student has a
story to tell, whether they realize it or not, and I feel that composing their
own autobiographies (or even smaller autobiographical vignettes, memoires, or
short stories) in the graphic novel form could be very engaging and very authentic
for students who are so rarely given the opportunity to tell their own stories.
Giving students the agency that comes
with sharing their story in writing is a reward in itself.
Additionally, Persepolis
can make for a gateway into teaching fiction writing and storytelling in
general. The narrative form is still
present in an autobiography—there are autobiographies written without narrative
structure, but they run the risk of lacking a certain appeal for students. Graphic novels to teach the storytelling and
narrative processes seems almost obvious when you consider the shared importance
of time and space in the graphic novel and in fiction.
Another interesting and apt approach to teaching this
particular graphic novel in the classroom would involve reading the text using
different critical lenses. It would be
particularly interesting to examine the experience of a young girl dealing with
sexism and religious and governmental change in a revolution that occurred in
the past while comparing her experiences to those of the students
themselves.
Examining Persepolis
as one of many specific texts to introduce in the classroom has flooded my mind
with new ideas and considerations for teaching graphic novels as interesting
and diverse literature in the classroom.
I am beginning to consider how I could use this novel and others to help
students not only read different literary forms but also write in them.
Allie: I am so excited and happy that you read Persepolis as part of your research. I have a particular fondness for this book, also, because it was written by a woman in a world (comics and graphic novels) that is very male-dominated. So, that's another angle to take!
ReplyDeleteYet another angle is to watch the animated film that was made (France), which you can access for free on YouTube:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fNx4Pa2Gqfk
A docu on the Lost City of Persepolis, destroyed by Alexander the Great. Another angle--historical lens--to take with students. It is quite easy to turn the study of this novel into an interdisciplinary unit!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PXdyoRKvpyc
Scholarly study of this comic (can you believe it! My dreams are coming true! Comics is literature!): http://cssaame.dukejournals.org/content/28/1/38.abstract
Thoughts on Persepolis from a comics blogger: http://blog.comicsgrid.com/2011/03/marjane-satrapis-elaborate-simplicity-persepolis/
You might also want to read Maus I (if you haven't) by Art Spielgelman. You might also want to check out Craig Thompson's Blankets and/or David Small's Stitches, if you have time to read another autobio comic.
Love this! Keep reading! Keep developing your ideas. Where do you want this to go? What do you want to accomplish besides reading about comics and reading comics?
Thanks, Allie. Let me know if you need more direction than this!