Iranian-French graphic novelist, cartoonist, illustrator, film director, and children's book author
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datum: 14 juni 2026 gast: Dena Vahdani Naar aanleiding van het overlijden van de Frans-Iraanse striptekenaar en regiseur Marjane Satrapi spreken we met Dena, comedian die ook Iraanse roots heeft, over Satrapi, over de geweldige graphic novel en film: Persepolis, over de geschiedenis en situatie van Iran en de parallellen tussen de levens van Dena en Satrapi.
Persepolis author Marjane Satrapi passed away on June 4. This week, Tim and Kumar recall their initial reactions to that book and talk a bit about her life and legacy. Then, we revisit segments of past episodes in which Tim and Brandon discussed Satrapi’s work: Persepolis review from episode 91, published September 3, 2007. `Persepolis 2 and the film version of Persepolis reviewed in episode 185, published June 22, 2009. Brought to you by: Full Manga Alchemists Our supporters on Patreon
durée : 00:59:08 - Les émissions culturelles de France Culture - par : Marie Richeux - "Persepolis", le roman graphique de Marjane Satrapi paru au tout début du 21ᵉ siècle, marqua un tournant dans l'histoire de la bande dessinée. D'autres récits suivirent, jusqu'à l'ouvrage collectif qu'elle dirigea récemment, Femme, vie, liberté, écho au soulèvement du peuple iranien. - réalisation : Jeanne Aléos, Mathilde Wagman, Marianne Chassort, Alexandre Alajbegovic, Cyril Marchan, Cassandre Puel, Julie Gastal - invités : Benoît Peeters Écrivain, scénariste de bandes dessinées et éditeur, biographe d'Hergé, Bahareh Akrami Dessinatrice. , Salomé Lahoche Autrice de bande-dessinée et illustratrice Vous aimez ce podcast ? Pour écouter tous les épisodes sans limite, rendez-vous sur Radio France
In the new film 'Pressure,' Scott plays an Army meteorologist advising military officials on the date for the D-Day invasion. He spoke to Terry Gross in 2024 about playing a killer conman in ‘Ripley' and the “hot priest” in ‘Fleabag.' Plus, we listen back to Terry Gross' 2003 interview with French-Iranian artist and writer Marjane Satrapi, who died June 4. Satrapi's groundbreaking graphic novel ‘Persepolis' introduced readers to life in Iran during the Islamic revolution and the Iran/Iraq war. And Justin Chang reviews ‘Disclosure Day.' See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for sponsorship and to manage your podcast sponsorship preferences.NPR Privacy Policy
durée : 00:10:21 - Les émissions culturelles de France Culture - par : Marie Labory - Marjane Satrapi, autrice et dessinatrice franco-iranienne, nous a quitté le 4 juin dernier. Elle était notamment à l'origine de la trilogie de BD "Persepolis". - réalisation : Laurence Malonda, Boris Pineau, Aïssatou N'Doye, Jules Barbier, Zohra Vignais, Lise Ripoche, Mathi Adjinsoff - invités : Catherine Robin Grand reporter et critique de BD à Elle, Lucie Servin Journaliste, spécialiste de littérature et de bande dessinée Vous aimez ce podcast ? Pour écouter tous les épisodes sans limite, rendez-vous sur Radio France
durée : 00:27:34 - Les émissions culturelles de France Culture - par : Marie Labory - Au programme de ce débat critique, un hommage à la dessinatrice et deux BD sorties récemment : "Aliocha disparu" de Léopold Prudon, une histoire de deuil, et "Flèche" de Simon Beuret, une histoire de concierge. - réalisation : Laurence Malonda, Boris Pineau, Aïssatou N'Doye, Jules Barbier, Zohra Vignais, Lise Ripoche, Mathi Adjinsoff - invités : Catherine Robin Grand reporter et critique de BD à Elle, Lucie Servin Journaliste, spécialiste de littérature et de bande dessinée Vous aimez ce podcast ? Pour écouter tous les épisodes sans limite, rendez-vous sur Radio France
In the new film 'Pressure,' Scott plays an Army meteorologist advising military officials on the date for the D-Day invasion. He spoke to Terry Gross in 2024 about playing a killer conman in ‘Ripley' and the “hot priest” in ‘Fleabag.' Plus, we listen back to Terry Gross' 2003 interview with French-Iranian artist and writer Marjane Satrapi, who died June 4. Satrapi's groundbreaking graphic novel ‘Persepolis' introduced readers to life in Iran during the Islamic revolution and the Iran/Iraq war. And Justin Chang reviews ‘Disclosure Day.' See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for sponsorship and to manage your podcast sponsorship preferences.NPR Privacy Policy
Flere steder i Storbritannien har der endnu engang været vrede demonstranter på gaden. Vreden er opstået i kølvandet på to knivoverfald, men lægger sig også i forlængelse af flere eksempler på store protestbevægelser rettet mod migranter i Storbritannien de seneste år. Fodboldslutrunder er igen og igen omgærdet af politik, men det VM, der begynder i dag, er om muligt mere forhadt og omdiskuteret end tidligere. Hvorfor? Den iranske tegneseriekunstner Marjane Satrapi har i årtier beskrevet den iranske historie i sine anerkendte værker, og for nylig døde den 56-årige eksiliraner. Men kan vi alligevel bruge Satrapis liv - og død - til at forstå Iran i dag? Medvirkende: Anna Gaarslev, DRs Europakorrespondent. Jan Jensen, journalist, Mediano, følger international fodbold tæt. Marjan Ganjjou, dansk-iraner og Satrapi-fan. Værter: Adrian Busk og Amalie Schroll Munk.
durée : 00:03:06 - Dans la bouche de Sophia Aram - par : Sophia Aram - Sophia Aram rend hommage à la réalisatrice iranienne, disparue le 4 juin 2026. Vous aimez ce podcast ? Pour écouter tous les épisodes sans limite, rendez-vous sur Radio France
This episode, we bring you Marjane Satrapi. She gave this talk on April 7, 2008, just about one year after the film adaptation of her comic Persepolis had been featured at the Cannes Film Festival and was nominated for an Academy Award for best animated feature. Sastrapi's death was announced on June 4, 2026. President Emmanual Macron of France said in the announcement, “Her passing marks the loss of a leading figure in French culture and a freedom-loving artist whose work carried a universal message and earned her immense international acclaim.” Satrapi was an Iranian born French author and film director and is considered one of the greatest contemporary graphic novelists. Her work includes critically acclaimed and canonical books Persepolis and Persepolis 2, graphic narratives which both feature a protagonist, Marji, whose life parallels Satrapi's. The books follow Marji from a childhood in Iran to spanning some of the most intense years of contemporary Iranian history during the Iranian revolution and the Iran-Iraq War, with Marji leaving the country as a teenager to study in Europe, returning to Tehran for a period before eventually setting in Paris. Satrapi was an Iranian women, working in France, and became one the bestselling writers & artists in the United States. The specifics of her story are of course, unique to her, but like great storytellers she connected with millions of readers because of the universal nature of her work. In addition to Persepolis and Persepolis 2, she wrote several children’s books and other graphic novels, and she directed several feature films, including 2019's “Radioactive,” about the life of Marie Curie, adapted from the graphic novel by Lauren Redniss and starring Rosamund Pike. Though she continued living in Paris, she remained an activist against Iran's Islamic regime, in particular protesting the restrictions on women. She said, “We artists must be humble but doing nothing is worse, being indifferent is worse. In this talk, Satrapi is wry, ironic and occasionally sarcastic. She references the influence of Persian miniatures and Art Speigelman's Pulitzer Prize winning graphic narrative Maus – the first comic ever to win the Pulitzer Prize. I use the work “comic” here instead of graphic novel intentionally since Satrapi rejects the term “graphic novel” as pretentious. To the end, she is grounded and funny, whether she is talking about American culture in Tehran in the 1970s or the personal challenges she faced as an artist working for the first time on film and being forced to collaborate with a huge group of people – a process she at first disliked, then came to appreciate. “Any intellectual and any artistic work, by definition, is an anti-fanatic work. Fanaticism presses on the button of emotion…When you make an intellectual and artistic work— when you don't pretend that you have the answers, but you only have questions to ask—when you make this work, for the person who listens to or reads you, not only do you ask them to be smart, but to work—to try to find the answers themselves.” Marjane Satrapi is an Iranian-born French graphic novelist, illustrator, film director, and children's book author. She was born in Iran in 1969 and grew up in Tehran in a middle-class Iranian family, attending the Lycee Francais until she left for Vienna and, later, Strasbourg to study Decorative Arts. She eventually moved to France, where she now lives with her husband, Mattias Ripa. Satrapi has worked on many graphic novels and animated films, but she attracted worldwide attention for her autobiographical comic series Persepolis. The work chronicles her childhood in Iran and her adolescence in Europe. In 2007, Persepolis was adapted into a critically acclaimed animated film of the same name that received over 25 major international award nominations and over 15 major international awards.
durée : 00:02:32 - Les Matins de France Culture - par : Guillaume Erner - Marjane Satrapi, qui avait le génie de rendre un monde présent avec presque rien, est morte hier. - réalisation : Félicie Faugère Vous aimez ce podcast ? Pour écouter tous les épisodes sans limite, rendez-vous sur Radio France
Cuando la madrina del programa publica un libro está claro el tema de la semana. Los culturetas hablan sobre lo nuevo de Mary Beard: ‘Clásicos sin filtro'. También recuerdan a Marjane Satrapi tras su muerte “de amor”. Con Rubén Amón, Guillermo Altares, Rosa Belmonte, Isabel Vázquez y Sergio del Molino.
durée : 00:53:12 - La 20e heure - par : Laure Adler - Derrière la caméra, devant sa toile ou dans ses bulles, l'artiste Marjane Satrapi fait l'éloge de l'indépendance d'esprit et du combat quotidien pour la liberté. Elle présente à la galerie Françoise Livinec sa deuxième exposition, "Femme ou rien", hymne au mystère et à la beauté féminine. - réalisation : Lilian Alleaume, Céline Villegas, Elodie Royer, Sascha Sais Vous aimez ce podcast ? Pour écouter tous les épisodes sans limite, rendez-vous sur Radio France
Marjane Satrapis „Persepolis“ war ein weltweiter Bestseller, der das Comicgenre und den europäischen Blick auf Iran veränderte. Jetzt ist Satrapi im Alter von 56 Jahren verstorben. Sie hinterlässt weit mehr als nur ihr bekanntestes Werk.
pWotD Episode 3320: Marjane Satrapi Welcome to popular Wiki of the Day, spotlighting Wikipedia's most visited pages, giving you a peek into what the world is curious about today.With 304,952 views on Thursday, 4 June 2026 our article of the day is Marjane Satrapi.Marjane Satrapi (French: [maʁʒan satʁapi]; Persian: مرجان ساتراپی, [mæɾˈdʒɒːn(e) sɒːtɾɒːˈpiː]; 22 November 1969 – June 2026) was a French and Iranian graphic novelist, film director, and children's book author. Her best-known works include the graphic novel Persepolis and its film adaptation; the graphic novel Chicken with Plums; Woman, Life, Freedom; and the Marie Curie biopic Radioactive.The success of Persepolis established Satrapi as one of the most widely read Iranian authors in the world, and her role in co-directing the film led to Satrapi becoming the first woman to be nominated for an Academy Award for Best Animated Feature.This recording reflects the Wikipedia text as of 04:08 UTC on Friday, 5 June 2026.For the full current version of the article, see Marjane Satrapi on Wikipedia.This podcast uses content from Wikipedia under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License.Visit our archives at wikioftheday.com and subscribe to stay updated on new episodes.Follow us on Bluesky at @wikioftheday.com.Also check out Curmudgeon's Corner, a current events podcast.Until next time, I'm generative Joanna.
durée : 00:02:32 - L'Humeur du matin - par : Guillaume Erner - Marjane Satrapi, qui avait le génie de rendre un monde présent avec presque rien, est morte hier. - réalisation : Félicie Faugère Vous aimez ce podcast ? Pour écouter tous les épisodes sans limite, rendez-vous sur Radio France
In memory of the recently passed Marjane Satrapi (1969-2026), re-airring our chat about Persepolis from July 2024). Rest In Peace/Power.https://www.npr.org/2026/06/04/nx-s1-5846531/marjane-satrapi-obituary“The normalization of things being taken away. You see all the things going on in Tehran in 1979 — you see them here as well, which makes it a sad, scary, and timeless tale.”PERSEPOLIS, by Marjane Satrapi is an award winning, now banned graphic autobiography from the early 2000s about a young girl growing up in Iran, and becoming a woman overseas, returning home, and dealing with everything in between.Originally published in French, Persepolis has sold millions of copies worldwide, and Satrapi also produced an award-winning film of the same name. In Persepolis, we meet young Marjane “Marji” Satrapi growing up in Tehran just before and during the Iranian Revolution of 1979, as well as thru the start of the Iran + Iraq War in the 1980s. Her parents are secular, upper-middle class activists, who worry for their precocious daughter's safety in the increasingly conservative and dangerous Iran, so send her off to Austria to become a teenager. Her teen years are fraught with all the drama you can expect from such an experience, but Marji - now becoming a young woman - always maintains the experience of an outsider looking in - with her feet in both worlds. Marji eventually returns to Iran to find that not only has her mother country changed, but she as well. This book was a surprise and illuminating for us in many ways, making us question - what would WE do in such a situation? This conversation is originally from from Quarantined Comics, where Raman + friends read comics that are so much more than just superheroes. PERSEPOLIS is a very Modern Minorities appropriate work, especially for the times we're living in, which you'll get to here us reflect on. Longtime friend of THAT pod Joshua joins from his most excellent podcast RABBIT FIGHTERS, where they pretty much do the same thing, but about movies and music.
Speak Truth- Be Power! The Great De-Bamboozling – Liberating Language Lucidity… & the astro*mytho°politico guiding narrative assignment Caroline weaves myriad story complexity guides : Ahana Sharma (why do we say “Middle East”) U.S. Getting schooled by Iranian Lego News, Lego News real origins of this Country ,with Resistance History Prof – Tad Stormer, Iranian political cultural guide,Maryam Ishani – & all loving honor to Marjane Satrapi Iranian-French graphic novelist, cultural treasure, best known for her autobiographical novel/film “Persepolis” – translating us into intimacy with Iranian People… who died yesterday age 56, noted for her tenderness and irony… President of the French National Assembly, Yaël Braun-Pivet, posted on X that France had lost “an immense artist”. She said: “Marjane Satrapi had turned her work into an act of freedom. With Persepolis, she had given a face and a voice to the Iranian revolution, proudly carrying the fight for women's freedom and dignity.” She created Woman, Life, Freedom, a collection of graphic stories about the protests in 2022, following the death of Mahsa Amini, who was arrested by the morality police for not wearing her hijab properly. Satrapi told the BBC in 2024: “If you take the art and culture out from any society, this society falls down.” BBC: Oscar-nominated Persepolis author Marjane Satrapi dies aged 56 https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c4g0nnj51jyo CoyoteNetworkNews.com · Events, Councils, & More Visionary Activist on Patreon The post The Great De-Bamboozling appeared first on KPFA.
Send us Fan MailToday we are rereleasing our episode on Persepolis to commemorate the life of Marjane Satrapi, the acclaimed Iranian-French writer, artist, filmmaker, and human rights advocate whose work transformed personal memory into a powerful act of witness. Satrapi died on June 4, 2026, at the age of 56, leaving behind a body of work that helped readers around the world better understand Iran, exile, identity, and the enduring importance of freedom.Born in Iran in 1969, Satrapi rose to international prominence with Persepolis, her groundbreaking graphic memoir about growing up during the Iranian Revolution and its aftermath. Told through stark black-and-white illustrations and an unforgettable narrative voice, Persepolis brought history to life through the eyes of a child and later a young woman navigating political upheaval, cultural displacement, and the search for self. The book became a global bestseller and was later adapted into an award-winning animated film that Satrapi co-directed.Throughout her career, Satrapi remained a fearless advocate for artistic expression, women's rights, and democratic values. "The real issue for me is human rights, it's the freedom of expression," Satrapi said in an interview. Satrapi's final book, Woman, Life, Freedom (2024) continued her life's work of amplifying issues and voices others wished to silence. Her family attributed her death to sadness over the loss of her husband a year prior.
durée : 00:20:00 - Le journal de 18h00 - Elle avait connu la consécration mondiale avec Persepolis. L'artiste franco-iranienne Marjane Satrapi, est décédée à Paris à l'âge de 56 ans, elle exilée en France depuis trente-deux ans, les réactions qui affluent montre à quel point son œuvre a inspiré tous les défenseurs de la liberté. - réalisation : La Rédaction de France Culture, Jean-François Braun, Caroline Bennetot Vous aimez ce podcast ? Pour écouter tous les épisodes sans limite, rendez-vous sur Radio France
durée : 01:00:33 - Le 13/14 - par : Jérôme Cadet - Beaucoup de français ont découvert le sort des femmes iraniennes grâce à elle : l'artiste Marjane Satrapi est morte à l'âge de 56 ans...son entourage l'a annoncé ce matin. Nous lui rendons hommage dans cette émission. - réalisation : Camille Poux-Jalaguier, Cecilia Arbona Vous aimez ce podcast ? Pour écouter tous les épisodes sans limite, rendez-vous sur Radio France
durée : 00:16:39 - Le 13/14 - par : Jérôme Cadet - Elle était le crayon et la voix des femmes iraniennes : Marjane Satrapi est morte à l'âge de 56 ans : l'artiste franco iranienne était célèbre pour sa bande dessinée à succès Persépolis. Nous reviendrons sur sa vie avec nos deux invités : le bédéiste Christophe Blain et le politologue Farid Vahid. - réalisation : Cecilia Arbona, Camille Poux-Jalaguier Vous aimez ce podcast ? Pour écouter tous les épisodes sans limite, rendez-vous sur Radio France
durée : 00:20:24 - Les journaux de France Culture - Elle avait connu la consécration avec ses romans graphiques, sans limite de pages. Mais, ce matin, la trace du chagrin a fini par trouver son point final. À 56 ans, Marjane Satrapi a refermé l'histoire de sa vie, "morte de tristesse", selon le communiqué publié par ses proches. - réalisation : La Rédaction de France Culture, Thomas Cluzel, Aloïs Guérin - invités : Lucas Chancel Économiste, professeur à Sciences Po Paris, spécialiste des inégalités mondiales et des enjeux sociaux liés à la transition écologique Vous aimez ce podcast ? Pour écouter tous les épisodes sans limite, rendez-vous sur Radio France
durée : 00:20:00 - Les journaux de France Culture - Elle avait connu la consécration mondiale avec Persepolis. L'artiste franco-iranienne Marjane Satrapi, est décédée à Paris à l'âge de 56 ans, elle exilée en France depuis trente-deux ans, les réactions qui affluent montre à quel point son œuvre a inspiré tous les défenseurs de la liberté. - réalisation : La Rédaction de France Culture, Jean-François Braun, Caroline Bennetot Vous aimez ce podcast ? Pour écouter tous les épisodes sans limite, rendez-vous sur Radio France
durée : 00:10:30 - Les journaux de France Culture - L'autrice franco-iranienne s'est éteinte à l'âge de 56 ans "de tristesse", un an après la disparition de son mari. Son œuvre, dont la bande dessinée "Persépolis" aura offert à ses engagements et à ses combats une aura mondiale. Jalons de sa vie et hommages émus de ses proches et amis. - réalisation : Mathieu Laurent, Annie Brault, Martin Desclozeaux, Caroline Bennetot - invités : Laurent Petitgirard Compositeur et chef d'orchestre français (Paris, 1950 -) Vous aimez ce podcast ? Pour écouter tous les épisodes sans limite, rendez-vous sur Radio France
durée : 00:20:24 - Journal de 12h30 - Elle avait connu la consécration avec ses romans graphiques, sans limite de pages. Mais, ce matin, la trace du chagrin a fini par trouver son point final. À 56 ans, Marjane Satrapi a refermé l'histoire de sa vie, "morte de tristesse", selon le communiqué publié par ses proches. - réalisation : La Rédaction de France Culture, Thomas Cluzel, Aloïs Guérin - invités : Lucas Chancel Économiste, professeur à Sciences Po Paris, spécialiste des inégalités mondiales et des enjeux sociaux liés à la transition écologique Vous aimez ce podcast ? Pour écouter tous les épisodes sans limite, rendez-vous sur Radio France
Satrapi fue una de las escritoras iraníes más influyentes de su generación.
Mit ihren schlichten Zeichnungen in Schwarzweiss über ihre Kindheit und Jugend in den 70er Jahren im Iran wurde Marjane Satrapi weltbrühmt. Ihre Grapic Novel "Persepolis" hat die französisch-iranische Künstlerin später selbst verfilmt. Bis zuletzt beschäftigten sie die Ereignisse in ihrer Heimat. 2023 hatte Satrapi einen Sammelband mit dem Titel "Frau, Leben, Freiheit" veröffentlicht. Sie wollte so die Menschen würdigen, die im Iran ihr Leben riskierten. Nun ist die Comiczeichenrin im Alter von 56 Jahren gestorben. Wir sprechen mit David Basler, Gründer des Comicverlags Edition Moderne, der die meisten ihrer Bücher verlegt hat.
I Diecimila uomini dell'armata mercenaria reclutata da Ciro per usurpare il trono di suo fratello, il Re dei Re, si ritrovano bloccati nel cuore dell'Impero Persiano dopo che il loro sponsor è stato ucciso in battaglia.L'armata mercenaria è uscita indenne dalla stessa battaglia ma è circondata da nemici che vogliono distruggerla e che utilizzeranno ogni metodo a loro disposizione per farlo, a cominciare dal tradimento. Ed è a tradimento che Tissaferne, uno dei Satrapi più fedeli del Re dei Re, ha catturato e ucciso i comandanti della spedizione.Con il cuore carico di rabbia e passione, una voce risuona e sprona i guerrieri alla vendetta con la speranza di poter tornare un giorno a casaGiocatori: Alessandro, Xeno, Nonno Nerd, GianniRapsodo: StefanoMontaggio: StefanoMusiche: Remote#remote #fumblecast #gdr #rpg #ttrpg #actualplay #forgedinthedark #idiecimila #playtest #puntata0 #addendumTutti i nostri contenuti sono gratuiti e disponibili pubblicamente, rilasciati sotto licenza Creative Commons BY-NC-SA 4.0: puoi distribuirli, manipolarli, copiarli quanto vuoi, e se hai dubbi su quali siano i limiti entro cui farlo puoi scriverci su Discord, dove saremo felice di risponderti.Un'ultima cosa: Quello che noi mettiamo in scena non è scriptato e giochiamo live, così come ci viene. Questo non vuol dire che sia l'unico modo o il modo giusto di giocare: se giochi in maniera diversa non è un problema!Remote fa parte di Fumblecast, un network indipendente di podcast che parlano di giochi.Questo episodio include contenuti generati dall'IA.
Marjane Satrapi, artista e intellettuale iraniana, da sempre al fianco delle cittadine e dei cittadini iraniani che rivendicano diritti indiscutibili, ha pronunciato la sua lezione dottorale il 2 febbraio 2023 nell'Aula magna di Santa Lucia in occasione della cerimonia di Inaugurazione dell'anno accademico 2022-2023 dell'Università di Bologna. Il video completo è disponibile sul canale YouTube di Ateneo: https://youtube.com/live/RZj6Vf6L0sU
“The normalization of things being taken away. You see all the things going on in Tehran in 1979 — you see them here as well, which makes it a sad, scary, and timeless tale.”PERSEPOLIS, by Marjane Satrapi is an award winning, now banned graphic autobiography from the early 2000s about a young girl growing up in Iran, and becoming a woman overseas, returning home, and dealing with everything in between.Originally published in French, Persepolis has sold millions of copies worldwide, and Satrapi also produced an award-winning film of the same name. In Persepolis, we meet young Marjane “Marji” Satrapi growing up in Tehran just before and during the Iranian Revolution of 1979, as well as thru the start of the Iran + Iraq War in the 1980s. Her parents are secular, upper-middle class activists, who worry for their precocious daughter's safety in the increasingly conservative and dangerous Iran, so send her off to Austria to become a teenager. Her teen years are fraught with all the drama you can expect from such an experience, but Marji - now becoming a young woman - always maintains the experience of an outsider looking in - with her feet in both worlds. Marji eventually returns to Iran to find that not only has her mother country changed, but she as well. This book was a surprise and illuminating for us in many ways, making us question - what would WE do in such a situation? This conversation is originally from from Quarantined Comics, where Raman + friends read comics that are so much more than just superheroes. PERSEPOLIS is a very Modern Minorities appropriate work, especially for the times we're living in, which you'll get to here us reflect on. Longtime friend of THAT pod Joshua joins from his most excellent podcast RABBIT FIGHTERS, where they pretty much do the same thing, but about movies and music. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoicesSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
“The normalization of things being taken away. You see all the things going on in Tehran in 1979 — you see them here as well, which makes it a sad, scary, and timeless tale.” PERSEPOLIS, by Marjane Satrapi is an award winning, now banned graphic autobiography from the early 2000s about a young girl growing up in Iran, and becoming a woman overseas, returning home, and dealing with everything in between.Originally published in French, Persepolis has sold millions of copies worldwide, and Satrapi also produced an award-winning film of the same name. In Persepolis, we meet young Marjane “Marji” Satrapi growing up in Tehran just before and during the Iranian Revolution of 1979, as well as thru the start of the Iran + Iraq War in the 1980s. Her parents are secular, upper-middle class activists, who worry for their precocious daughter's safety in the increasingly conservative and dangerous Iran, so send her off to Austria to become a teenager. Her teen years are fraught with all the drama you can expect from such an experience, but Marji - now becoming a young woman - always maintains the experience of an outsider looking in - with her feet in both worlds. Marji eventually returns to Iran to find that not only has her mother country changed, but she as well. This book was a surprise and illuminating for us in many ways, making us question - what would WE do in such a situation? This conversation is originally from from Quarantined Comics, where Raman + friends read comics that are so much more than just superheroes. PERSEPOLIS is a very Modern Minorities appropriate work, especially for the times we're living in, which you'll get to here us reflect on. Longtime friend of THAT pod Joshua joins from his most excellent podcast RABBIT FIGHTERS, where they pretty much do the same thing, but about movies and music. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
During a worldwide Quarantined Comics and Rabbit Fighters podcast REVOLUTION, Raman + Josh (two non-Persian dudes doing a Persian protagonist podcat) got the ORIGINAL band back together to talk about a comic that somehow NEITHER of us had read before, PERSEPOLIS, by Marjane Satrapi, an award winning, now banned graphic autobiography from the early 2000s about a young girl growing up in Iran, and becoming a woman overseas, returning home, and dealing with everything in between. The book was originally published in French, and has sold millions of copies worldwide. Its creator Satrapi later produced an award-winning film of the same name In Persepolis, we meet young Marjane “Marji” Satrapi growing up in Tehran just before and during the Iranian Revolution of 1979, as well as thru the start of the Iran + Iraq War in the 1980s. Her parents, are secular, upper-middle class activists, who worry for their precocious daughter's safety in the increasingly conservative and dangerous Iran, so send her off to Austria to become a teenager. Her teen years are fraught with all the drama you can expect from such an experience, but Marji - now becoming a young woman - always maintains the experience of an outsider looking in - with her feet in both worlds. Marji eventually returns to Iran to find that not only has her mother country changed, but she as well. This book was a surprise and illuminating for us in many ways, making us question - what would WE do in such a situation?
La historieta de Satrapi es ingeniosa porque entrelaza el tránsito de una niña hacia la adolescencia con la convulsión social y política que hervía a su alrededor.
This graphic memoir (ahem) This collection of comics chronicles the life of an Iranian girl named Marji, whose experiences are heavily based on those of author Marjane Satrapi. Satrapi lived through the Islamic Revolution in Iran and its authoritarian aftermath, and her story is one of resistance, education, and the difficulty of finding yourself amidst societal upheaval. Note: our discussion is based on reading the Complete Persepolis, which combines Volume 1: The Story of a Childhood with Volume 2: The Story of a Return.This episode is sponsored by Squarespace. Go to squarespace.com/overdue for 10% of your first purchase of a website or domain.Our theme music was composed by Nick Lerangis.Follow @overduepod on Instagram and BlueskyAdvertise on OverdueSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
In this episode Lee and Leah tackle an animated feature: the often funny, but ultimately pretty heavy and harrowing "Persepolis" (2007). This film, written and directed by Marjane Satrapi & Vincent Paronnaud, adapts Satrapi's striking graphic novel about her life growing up in Iran, and later France, in the wake of the Iranian Revolution. The hosts also talk about what they've watched as of late, including thoughts on the new "Fallout" tv series. "Persepolis" IMDB Featured Music: "The Eye of the Tiger" by Chiara Mastroianni, and "Teheran Disco" & "Persepolis Theme" by Olivier Bernet.
Uno di quei capolavori del fumetto che Potrebbe Piacerti cerca di far scoprire è l'argomento toccato da Silvia. Si parla di "Persepolis" di Marjane Satrapi: un viaggo nell'Iran degli anni 70 e 80 per scoprire una cultura di cui troppi sanno troppo poco. Sergio, invece, si concentra su un piccolo ma a suo modo sorprendente libro di Matteo Bordone: "L'invenzione del boomer". Chi sono i boomer, alla fine? E meritano davvero tutto questo astio?Pront* ad allungare la vostra coda di lettura?--Qui tutti i link:https://oldmanaries.it/index.php/potrebbe-piacerti/https://silviacolaneri.it/potrebbe-piacerti/----Per contattarci:Pagina Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/potrebbepiacertiAccount Instagram: @potrebbepiacertiSergio: https://www.oldmanaries.it - Instagram: @OldManAriesSilvia: https://www.silviacolaneri.it - Instagram: @Silosa
Elwood and Stephen look at Persepolis the animated adaptation of Marjane Satrapi's graphic novel about her life in pre and post-revolutionary Iran as the film traces Satrapi's life and her own rebellion she lead against an oppressive regime.
On this edition of #velshibannedbookclub, MSNBC host and Citizen board member Ali Velshi invites to the show Marjane Satrapi, author of "Persepolis." This bestselling graphic novel explores revolution in Iran and comes to the conclusion that being brainwashed is a choice. Many Iranians, Satrapi observes, are now choosing freedom.
Welcome back to Make Mine Paperback, and this week's book: Persepolis. Using powerful black-and-white comic strip images, Satrapi tells the story of her life in Tehran from ages six to fourteen, years that saw the overthrow of Shah's regime, the triumph of the Islamic Revolution, and the devastating effects of war with Iraq. The intelligent and outspoken only child of committed Marxists and the great-granddaughter of one of Iran's last emperors, Marjane bears witness to a childhood uniquely entwined with the history of her country.
A Persepolis meghatározó animációs film, amelyet az iráni születésű Marjane Satrapi rendezett a saját képregényéből Vincent Paronnaud mellett. Az iráni iszlamista forradalom alatt kislánykorát élő Satrapi a saját emlékeiből írta meg a Persepolis című képregényét, amely 2001-től kezdve jelent meg. Ebből készült a 2007-es Persepolis mozifilm. Adásunk vendége Szép Eszter képregénykutató, a két műsorvezető pedig András és Péter. Mi a jelentősége a felnőtteknek szóló Persepolisnak az animációs filmek történetében? Milyen hasonló, valóságot feldolgozó művek követték az utóbbi években? Hogyan alkotnak a Persepolisban asszociációkat az elvont képek a valós világ szörnyűségeivel? Milyen módon ültetik át a rendezők a film nyelvére a képregény állóképeit? Mit tudnak hozzáadni a történetmeséléshez a mozgás segítségével? Beszélünk a film cselekményéről: milyen eszközökkel mesél vizuálisan is arról, hogy milyen az iráni elnyomó rezsim alatt élni? A bécsben játszódó szakaszban milyen izgalmas módokat talál, hogy a pubertást ábrázolja, és hogyan állítja szembe az iráni tragédiákat a nyugati világ dekadenciájával? Végezetül a hazatérése után hogyan talál fogást Satrapi a médium segítségével a depresszión? Ha tetszett az adásunk, támogass bennünket a Patreonon! Csatlakozz a Facebook-csoportunkhoz is! További linkek A képregények titkos élete, Szép Eszter és Mráz István immár inaktív podcastja Szép Eszter Instagramja Május 10-én kezdődik a Képregényfesztivál, amelynek Eszter az egyik szervezője. Kövessétek az eseményt! A képregényfesztivál Instagramon, a Facebookon A Vakfolt podcast Facebook oldala A Vakfolt podcast a Twitteren Vakfolt címke a Letterboxdon A Vakfolt podcast a YouTube-on A Vakfolt podcast a Spotify-on A Vakfolt podcast a Google podcasts oldalán A Vakfolt az Apple podcasts oldalán A főcímzenéért köszönet az Artur zenekarnak András a Twitteren: @gaines_ Péter a Twitteren: @freevo Emailen is elértek bennünket: feedback@vakfoltpodcast.hu
durée : 00:52:41 - L'Heure bleue - En Iran, les gens continuent, malgré la répression du gouvernement, de manifester au péril de leur vie. Marjane Satrapi auteure de BD et réalisatrice, Farid Vahid, chercheur à la Fondation Jean Jaurès, et Chirinne Ardakani, avocate, témoignent.
durée : 00:24:33 - L'invité de 8h20 : le grand entretien - par : Nicolas Demorand, Léa Salamé - Marjane Satrapi auteure de BD et réalisatrice franco-iranienne et Farid Vahid, iranien, docteur de l'Observatoire Afrique du Nord et Moyen Orient de la Fondation Jean Jaurès sont les invités du Grand Entretien.
durée : 00:24:33 - L'invité de 8h20 : le grand entretien - par : Nicolas Demorand, Léa Salamé - Marjane Satrapi auteure de BD et réalisatrice franco-iranienne et Farid Vahid, iranien, docteur de l'Observatoire Afrique du Nord et Moyen Orient de la Fondation Jean Jaurès sont les invités du Grand Entretien.
Book Vs. Movie: PersepolisMarjane Satrapi's Comic Autobiography Vs. the Animated Feature The Margos this week delve into the complicated history of Iran via the life story of artist and writer Marjane Satrapi who wrote several comics under the banner of Persepolis from her early childhood to her later years as an activist. The original work was published in French as Satrapi is part French and Iranian and spent much of her adult life in France. She had a first-hand look at the Islamic Revolution in 1979 when her family members were jailed for being activists. Satrapi vividly recalls being forced to wear a veil, how women's rights were taken away quickly during this time, and how this affected her education, her family situation, and the eventual war with Iraq. The 2007 film was nominated for Best Animated Feature at the 80th Academy Awards. Between the 2000 novel and the film--which did we like better? You have to listen to find out!!In this ep the Margos discuss:The life story of Marjane SatrapiWhat the Margos were taught about Iran in the 1970s and 1980s The controversy around the book being taught in schoolsThe American cast: Amethyste Frezignac (child Marjane,) Gena Rowlands (Grandmother,) Sean Penn (Father,) Iggy Pop (Uncle Anoush,) and Mathilde Merlot as Tina. Clips used:Marji in art classPersepolis 2007 trailerThe revolution brings home AnoushThe Eye of the TigerMusic by Olivier Bernet Book Vs. Movie is part of the Frolic Podcast Network. Find more podcasts you will love Frolic.Media/podcasts. Join our Patreon page to help support the show! https://www.patreon.com/bookversusmovie Book Vs. Movie podcast https://www.facebook.com/bookversusmovie/Twitter @bookversusmovie www.bookversusmovie.comEmail us at bookversusmoviepodcast@gmail.com Margo D. @BrooklynFitChik www.brooklynfitchick.com brooklynfitchick@gmail.comMargo P. @ShesNachoMama https://coloniabook.weebly.com/ Our logo was designed by Madeleine Gainey/Studio 39 Marketing Follow on Instagram @Studio39Marketing & @musicalmadeleine
Book Vs. Movie: PersepolisMarjane Satrapi's Comic Autobiography Vs. the Animated Feature The Margos this week delve into the complicated history of Iran via the life story of artist and writer Marjane Satrapi who wrote several comics under the banner of Persepolis from her early childhood to her later years as an activist. The original work was published in French as Satrapi is part French and Iranian and spent much of her adult life in France. She had a first-hand look at the Islamic Revolution in 1979 when her family members were jailed for being activists. Satrapi vividly recalls being forced to wear a veil, how women's rights were taken away quickly during this time, and how this affected her education, her family situation, and the eventual war with Iraq. The 2007 film was nominated for Best Animated Feature at the 80th Academy Awards. Between the 2000 novel and the film--which did we like better? You have to listen to find out!!In this ep the Margos discuss:The life story of Marjane SatrapiWhat the Margos were taught about Iran in the 1970s and 1980s The controversy around the book being taught in schoolsThe American cast: Amethyste Frezignac (child Marjane,) Gena Rowlands (Grandmother,) Sean Penn (Father,) Iggy Pop (Uncle Anoush,) and Mathilde Merlot as Tina. Clips used:Marji in art classPersepolis 2007 trailerThe revolution brings home AnoushThe Eye of the TigerMusic by Olivier Bernet Book Vs. Movie is part of the Frolic Podcast Network. Find more podcasts you will love Frolic.Media/podcasts. Join our Patreon page to help support the show! https://www.patreon.com/bookversusmovie Book Vs. Movie podcast https://www.facebook.com/bookversusmovie/Twitter @bookversusmovie www.bookversusmovie.comEmail us at bookversusmoviepodcast@gmail.com Margo D. @BrooklynFitChik www.brooklynfitchick.com brooklynfitchick@gmail.comMargo P. @ShesNachoMama https://coloniabook.weebly.com/ Our logo was designed by Madeleine Gainey/Studio 39 Marketing Follow on Instagram @Studio39Marketing & @musicalmadeleine
**THIS EPISODE CONTAINS FULL SPOILERS** Do you know what a bandes dessinées is...? Well, neither did we, until now that is! Listen as we discuss Marjane Satrapi's autobiographical graphic novel, "Persepolis," which depicts her childhood up to her early adult years in Iran and Austria during and after the Islamic Revolution. We compare and contrast the book to its groundbreaking film adaptation of the same name, directed by Satrapi in conjunction with French artist Vincent Paronnaud. Aside from being a valuable history lesson on a topic that's rarely discussed in America, the movie is also a breathtaking piece of art, so please give this episode a listen! #Persepolis #MarjaneSatrapi #VincentParonnaud #bandesdessinées #FilmisLit #FilmisLitPod #FilmisLitPodcast #DannyGaylord #Iran #IslamicRevolution #IranianRevolution #Movieadaptation #movieReview #PersepolisReview #PersepolisMovieReview #Autobiography #Islam
This week, Eleanor speaks with the acclaimed Iranian graphic artist and filmmaker Marjane Satrapi. Her memoir Persepolis was an international bestseller turned prize-winning feature film, recounting her childhood in Iran and adolescence in Europe before and after the Iranian Revolution. Satrapi was in Toronto for TIFF 2011 with her romantic film, Chicken with Plums.
Marjane Satrapi's groundbreaking graphic memoir Persepolis: The Story of a Childhood chronicles the life of a young girl growing up in Iran during the Islamic Revolution. In this episode we discuss the experience of reading graphic novels, the impact of Satrapi's illustration style, and the importance of this work in establishing non-serialized graphics as a legitimate genre of literature. We look at class, religion, and cultural memory through the eyes of Marji and wonder about Marjane's intended audience and how well the book resonates for readers who don't have pre-existing knowledge of Iranian history and culture (spoiler - it hits!). We consult with an Iranian-American millennial about the impact of the book in that community and we play a round of "name that tune" with some of the songs of Marji's childhood. These Books Made Me is a podcast about the literary heroines who shaped us and is a product of the Prince George's County Memorial Library System podcast network. Stay in touch with us via Twitter @PGCMLS with #TheseBooksMadeMe or by email at TheseBooksMadeMe@pgcmls.info. For recommended readalikes and deep dives into topics related to each episode, visit our blog at https://pgcmls.medium.com/.We mentioned a lot of topics in this episode. Here's a brief list of some informative articles about some of them if you want to do your own further research: Emma Watson interviews Marjane Satrapi: https://www.vogue.com/article/emma-watson-interviews-marjane-satrapiWomen and the Islamic Revolution: https://www.wilsoncenter.org/article/reconstructed-lives-women-and-irans-islamic-revolutionSatrapi interview about the film version of the book: https://www.theguardian.com/film/2008/mar/29/biography
It's the end of an era on the Lambcast. Jay has hosted since episode 200, but he's now heading off for pastures new, and leaving Richard the keys to the Lambcast paddock. In commemoration, he threw himself a leaving party and invited all your favourite Lambcast guests to join in the fun! This show is the longest in Lambcast history, over 4 hours of mostly film-related nonsense and entertainment, enjoy!00:00 Introductions05:59 Dylan holds Jay's exit interview12:07 Aaron and Jay imagine a live-action Wall-E17:52 Jeanette and Jay dream up Lego sets24:22 JD and Jay share their love of Lord of the Rings31:03 Justin and Jay re-cast Jurassic Park39:57 Sofia, Getter, Nikhat and Jay draft Cornetto trilogy characters48:09 Dan and Jay rank the James Bond actors54:03 Tony and Jay reminisce on their favourite Taskmaster moments60:05 Rebecca and Jay share their film location stories65:18 Kai, Heather and Jay do a Milfcast speed-run75:26 Jason challenges Jay to a round of the Netflix game82:51 Thomas and Jay celebrate the best films of 202089:42 James and Jay list their favourite director cameos95:36 Lindsay, Jess, Rob, Marc and Nick test Jay on his knowledge of them118:53 Meg and Jay bemoan accents and praise posters127:44 Todd and Jay plough through the Police Academy franchise137:00 Howard quizzes Jay on his Hitchcock143:00 DJ Jeff Goldblum calls in for a chat148:34 Zoe scares up Jay's favourite horror movies154:44 Bubbawheat challenges Jay with a mini game of Lambpardy164:07 David serenades the cast with a piano game171:31 Audrey and Jay air their grievances about the 1001 Movies list179:00 Robert and Jay debut their oft-threatened side project185:22 Chris and Jay hand out some blank cheques190:50 Le Anne is curious about Jay's viewing habits200:11 Lackey and Jay sing the praises of their favourite soundtracks206:14 Cameron and Jay fight over their favourite sport movies211:46 Amanda and Jay hypothesise on dinosaur versus magical beast battles217:57 Matthew sets Jay a cornucopia of Simplistic challenges225:25 Lisa and Jay babble over literary adaptations232:18 Doug and Jay try to remember 2020's lesser movies238:35 Elwood and Jay lament their worst movie experiences245:01 Nick gets all poetic250:29 Rob hosts a round of Who Wants to be a Jayzillionaire264:58 Richard has some notes for Jay273:57 Jay closes the show with some parting wordsThe show can be found on iTunes, but the Lambcast archives are now also available on YourListen.com, so head over there to find all the past shows available for downloading and listening too! If you're interested, you too can be a LAMBcaster - we love new blood! For more information on the LAMBcast, check out the topic at the LAMB Forums. Music provided royalty-free by Kevin MacLeod's Incompetech website. Big thanks to Kevin for providing this service. Opening song by Cake. The LAMBcast loves feedback, too, so if you've got any suggestions for the show, leave it in the comments section at the LAMB or contact us on Twitter, @lambcast. Please visit and like our Facebook page, and finally, we're on iTunes, and would still love a review, even if it's a bad one. Thanks for listening!