I ran out to do some errands after work yesterday and when I turned the car on, the radio was in the middle of NPR broadcasting a piece about Marjane Satrapi's passing. (If you're reading this blog, it's news you've almost certainly already come across.) It wasn't a particularly long or detailed piece, much the same as they'd offer up for a movie director or professional sportsball player. They of course made express mention of Persepolis, both the book and the movie, and spoke a bit to her advocacy.
This was, as I said, after I got off from work, so I had already seen/heard the news from a dozen or so different outlets. Mostly comics and pop culture related sites. Although the first place I read about it was Le Monde, the French newspaper. Which makes sense, given that Satrapi had been living in France for decades and they're several hours ahead of any US-based outlets.
What struck me about the NPR report, though, was they used a few snippets from interviews they previously had with her. One from 2007, and another from 2024. Not just clips they found with her speaking, these were interviews from their own archives. The idea that a graphic novelist's death might even get mentioned on a mainstream news outlet was unheard of when I was growing up. But here we have them not only providing a respectable obituary, but an obituary for a graphic novelist who they had held in respectable enough esteem to have done previous pieces about her for two decades!
I went back through NPR's archives. They did indeed have an obituary for Will Eisner back in 2005, but they didn't have audio clips of him. I can't find an NPR obituary at all for Jack Kirby, who died in 1994.
When I was school, I was pushed into lockers and generally bullied for liking comic books. Much has been written over the last couple decades about how that's changed and comics are now an accepted part of mainstream culture. With the primary evidence often being the string of superhero movies in the 21st century, many of which have individually grossed over $100 million each. But I think Satrapi's obituary here is a better, more significant, reflection of the change. Not that NPR is the epitome of mainstream culture and not that her passing was higlighted, but that they had twenty year old interviews from their own archives to draw on. She had been given serious thought and consideration for decades that goes well beyond the marketing hype around the also-from-2007 Spider-Man 3 and Rise of the Silver Surfer.
This was, as I said, after I got off from work, so I had already seen/heard the news from a dozen or so different outlets. Mostly comics and pop culture related sites. Although the first place I read about it was Le Monde, the French newspaper. Which makes sense, given that Satrapi had been living in France for decades and they're several hours ahead of any US-based outlets.
What struck me about the NPR report, though, was they used a few snippets from interviews they previously had with her. One from 2007, and another from 2024. Not just clips they found with her speaking, these were interviews from their own archives. The idea that a graphic novelist's death might even get mentioned on a mainstream news outlet was unheard of when I was growing up. But here we have them not only providing a respectable obituary, but an obituary for a graphic novelist who they had held in respectable enough esteem to have done previous pieces about her for two decades!
I went back through NPR's archives. They did indeed have an obituary for Will Eisner back in 2005, but they didn't have audio clips of him. I can't find an NPR obituary at all for Jack Kirby, who died in 1994.
When I was school, I was pushed into lockers and generally bullied for liking comic books. Much has been written over the last couple decades about how that's changed and comics are now an accepted part of mainstream culture. With the primary evidence often being the string of superhero movies in the 21st century, many of which have individually grossed over $100 million each. But I think Satrapi's obituary here is a better, more significant, reflection of the change. Not that NPR is the epitome of mainstream culture and not that her passing was higlighted, but that they had twenty year old interviews from their own archives to draw on. She had been given serious thought and consideration for decades that goes well beyond the marketing hype around the also-from-2007 Spider-Man 3 and Rise of the Silver Surfer.













