The Fight for Equal Education: The Book Persepolis by Marjane Satrapi

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The Fight for Equal Education
Although there are some rights that are undeniable to humans, it is not always the case that they are made available. This is especially prominent for the rights of women, who since the domestication of plants and animals have been sent to the bottom of society, and used to carry out the purpose of men. One way in which men have taken the power away from women is by taking away their education, and in turn their ability to develop independently and to be. functional parts of society. In her book Persepolis, Marjane Satrapi described the struggle of growing up as a young girl in Iran, as well as the support given to her by her parents. They encouraged her to pursue education so that she was able to develop her own ideas. Similarly, Margaret Fuller’s father stressed the importance of education and he pushed her to study and pursue knowledge. As a result, both these women used literature to fight for the right to equal education promised by “The Universal Declaration of Human Rights”.
Throughout her childhood Fuller’s father worked hard to educate her and make sure she studied. Due to this she was given the education that girls of her time lacked. Fuller’s father is credited for working her hard. Reuben states, “Fuller's education was unusual only because she was a girl. She was provided a ‘rigorous but severe model of intellectual attainment’” (Reuben, "Chapter 4: Margaret Fuller."). Boys during this time were educated to the same level Fuller was, but for girls this type of rigorous education was a rarity. Girls weren’t encouraged to study, they were encouraged to marry. Even though Fuller was encouraged to study by her father, there were still differences that were clearly evident between the educati...

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...be closed. By educating women the same way as men, they will be able to get the same jobs, and hopefully the same pay.
Both Margaret Fuller and Marjane Satrapi were encouraged to go against the norm when they were young girls by pursuing an education that few girls received during that time. This unusual education they both received, unusual because it was unlike the education of other women, allowed for them to realize that the education they received was far beyond just different from that of other women, but of men as well. Their access to good education also lead them to eventually fight through literature to change the inequality that exists between men and women. Even though equal education was promised by the "Universal Declaration of Human Rights”, inequality within education still exists, even though Satrapi and Fuller worked to eliminate this inequality.

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