Persepolis: The Story of a Childhood

How does Marji reflect the common stereotypical thinking of other Iranians? How does Marji's dad cut through her propaganda-induced thinking?

Chapter 11: The F-14s (80-86)

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In “The F-14’s,” Marjane begins a struggle with her feelings of nationalism. She is unable to find a cause to root for in the fundamentalist government and, instead, finds her national pride in the great Persian empires. She correlates the war with Iraq with the Arab invasion of Persia 1400 years before and claims that it is patriotic and just to fight the Arab forces. Her father understands the real war is not just with another country but is, instead, a war inside of the country between those that envision a modern Iran and those that adhere to extremism.

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