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https://studentshare.org/english/1663557-annotated-bibliography.
Annotated Bibliography Kelley, Ron, Jonathan Friedlander, and Anita Colby. Irangeles: Iranians in Los Angeles. Los Angeles: of California Press, 1993. Print. In a novel format, this work is a combination of essays, interviews, and photographs of the Iranian immigrants in Southern California. The work shows how Iranian women in the U.S try to adopt the Western culture and to deny their Iranian roots. This works helps in explaining the general tendency among the Iranian women writers after the revolution to present themselves as liberal, freedom-loving, and democratic human beings who have nothing to do with terrorism and extremism.
The work offers a lot of valuable insight into the cultural, ethnic, and religious diversity of Iranians and the ways they adopt to draw a balance between Iranian fundamentalism and American liberal thinking. Ramazani, Nesta. The Dance of the Rose and the Nightingale. New York: Syracuse University Press, 2002. Print. Nesta is another female contemporary of Satrapi. With an Iranian father and English mother, Nesta narrates her life in Iran before and after revolution. The writer faces a lot of pressure in the fundamental Iranian society, and manages to struggle through with luck and hard work.
The work shows how Iranian, Islamic, and Western cultures collide, mingle, and influence the lives of people in Iran. The autobiography by Nesta is used in two ways. Firstly, it helps understand the influence of fundamentalism on Iranian people, and secondly, it helps explore the general tendency among Iranian women writers to show adherence to the West. Satrapi, Marjane. “Why I Wrote Persepolis.” Writing! Nov./Dec. 2003: 9-11. Print. In this article, Satrapi explains the reasons why she decided to write a novel on Iran and why she selected the graphic novel form.
In this article, Satrapi says that she wanted to change the popular image of Iran as a haven of fundamentalism, fanaticism, and terrorism. It is this desire that made her write the novel. This article helps prove that Satrapi has carefully crafted the novel so that the general populace is presented very similar to the modern Western people in thinking and attitude except for a few fundamentalists.
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