Maus Essay

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    The most compelling page in Maus is the one when Anja and Vladek are going towards Sosnowiec although they do not have the goal destination. They are heading somewhere and hoping for the best. This story is narrated with the help of design and illustration and it is very interesting because it is based on the life story of the creator. Spiegelman designed the novel by keeping the illustrations simple and it is done in black and white instead of coloring. The story follows the lives of Jews who are

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    Charles Stanley once said, “Fear stifles our thinking and actions. It creates indecisiveness that results in stagnation. I have known talented people who procrastinate indefinitely rather than risk failure. Lost opportunities cause erosion of confidence, and the downward spiral begins.” This quote from Stanley is saying that fear makes difficult to accomplish tasks. You become indecisive, lose opportunities and lack confidence. Fear is one of the strongest human emotions. It is what motivates

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    The Wars and the Maus are both two types of writings that are based on a World War. There are many characters who each face their own kinds of war also and must deal with different kinds of war aside from the global war at hand. The protagonists in both, The Wars and Maus are dealt with the challenge of having to deal with multiple varieties of war that are very similar. However, each character is effected very differently by each war. Robert in The Wars and Vladek in Maus both experience a loss

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    All lives are dependent upon fate and luck. In the book Maus by Art Speigilman’s father, Vladek is a Holocaust survivor. Vladek was extraordinarily lucky when during his time with the Russian army, they felt his piping hot gun and concluded that they were shooting at them, most would’ve been shot dead, but he wasn't. He also was lucky that his black market business went on for so long and didn’t get caught. However, Vladek had fate on his side as well. From dodging bullets and marrying the woman

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    are pretending to be whatever that mask depicts. We are aware that there is a person underneath, but we assume that they bear no resemblance to the mask they wear. If they were, then why would they were a mask in the first place? In graphic novel MAUS II, Art Spiegelman tells the story of his father’s experiences within the Nazi concentration camp Auschwitz (1992). There are many visual themes or motifs present throughout this graphic novel, but one important motif represented are masks. Spiegelman

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    Luck seems to regularly influence many parts of people’s lives. However, without making smart choices at the right time, luck does not happen merely by chance. Throughout the whole story of Maus II, the role of resourcefulness in survival is conferred repeatedly. When the author’s father, Vladek, was in Auschwitz, there were several moments where he was about to be killed. In such circumstances, resourcefulness played much larger role than luck, and it helped him to stay alive. Specifically, Vladek’s

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    the method they use was animals to make different races of people. The use of animals as human races shows us the ideas of the Holocaust more straight forward than using humans as the characters.   In the book  Maus by Art Spiegelman, it tells the story about Valdek Spiegelman who is a mouse, and a  Holocaust survivor, and his son Artie who wrote a book on his father and the horrible things he encountered during the time he was trying to survive the Holocaust.      I believe The book uses animals

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    aspects of this method was the use of animals to portray different races of people. The use of animals as human races shows the reader the ideas of the Holocaust a lot more forcefully than simply using humans as the characters.   In the book called Maus by Art Spiegelman, it tells the story about a mouse named Valdek Spiegelman, who is a Holocaust survivor, and his son Artie. Artie writes a book on his father and the terrifying experience he dealt with when surviving the Holocaust.       The book

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    Vladek's personality underwent a huge change due to his experiences during World War II. His personality is so dynamic and it was the experiences that he made during the Holocaust that changed him so dramamtically. In the beginning of Maus the reader is thrown into a scenario of the Author, Art's, many visits to his father's. Art and his father, Vladek starte a conversation about Vladek's past, but Vladek is very reluctant to discuss his past with anyone Vladek seems to be a very untrusting

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    What about one person’s salvation is another person’s destruction? Do you believe that is also true? Is it possible for someone’s salvation to affect someone the opposite way? In Maus by Art Spiegelman it is. The main character in Maus, Artie (art), comes home to find out his mother has committed suicide. His mother, Anja, had been going through major depression and was in a bad place. Death was her only way of comfort and relief but for Artie it was an

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