Maus Essay

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    horrific event in our worlds history. An event that killed over millions of people and effected millions of peoples’ lives. Everyone has their own experience of living through the 1940’s when the holocaust was taking place. The author of the comic Maus tells the story of himself living and surviving through the concentration camps. He writes a personal narrative through pictures and word text bubbles to engage the readers and allow them to put themselves in his shoes but also see the whim of hope

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    Although “Maus” (Spiegelman, 1986) is a story in comic form, Art Spiegelman managed to exhibit "the depth and subtlety that we learn to expect in traditional novels and extended nonfictional texts" by creating a biographical work about the experience that his father had as Polish Jew during the Holocaust. That subject in itself is serious, but Spiegelman made it even more compelling by adding a secondary biography of sorts as he tells us the story of his interactions with his father, as he visits

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    Jewish people had to endure on their way to Auschwitz, one of the most devastating and infamous concentration camps. While illustrating a panel based off of one of these images, I used many different techniques, inspired by Art Spiegelman, the author of Maus. I adopted these techniques to display the emotion and density of the tone the photograph gives off. My illustration is loosely based on the photograph I selected from the Auschwitz Album, which displays many women and children waiting on a platform

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    during the Holocaust? After the Jews through this experience, almost died, just a few Jews survived, and the people who are the survivors, how would their life look like? In Maus, Vladek is a Jew who was through the process of the Holocaust. After the end of WWII, he was one of the rare survivors from the Holocaust. Through the Maus, it is easy to see what did he change from the past to the present and his life after the Holocaust. “Like an atom bomb that disperses its radioactive fallout in distant

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    population were killed in the Holocaust. The Jewish Population of Europe | Holocaust Encyclopedia. Very few people survived, but those who did have important stories to tell. Two texts that we have read, Maus I: A Survivor’s Tale and Often a Minute, both explore the topic of Holocaust survivors. In Maus I: A Survivor’s Tale: A Survivor’s Tale, Art Spiegelman tells the story of his father, Vladek, and how he survived the Holocaust. Vladek shares his life experiences with his son and what he learned because

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    Character List- round or flat Art Spiegelman- r * Art Spiegelman is the author and narrator of Maus, and also one of the story's main characters. * Born in Stockholm after the Holocaust, he is the only surviving child of Vladek and Anja Spiegelman. * He is married to Francoise, a French woman who converted to Judaism upon their engagement. * Maus centers around two primary narratives: Vladek's experiences as a Jew in World War II Poland, and Art's relationship with his aging father

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    The awarded Graphic novel Maus was praised and recognized not only for its incredible history but also for the way it was contextualized: as a comic book. Art Spiegelman used this discriminated medium generally made for child audience to talk about the Holocaust, one of the biggest atrocities in the recent history of mankind. The plot tells the story of Vladek, a Polish Jew who tells his story as a survivor of World War II. At first sight, Maus seems to be a comic book like many others. But it

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    internationally. Books such as Maus, A survivor’s tale by Art Spiegelman, and Anne Frank by Ann Kramer. Spiegelman presents Maus in a comical format; he integrated the significance of Holocaust while maintaining the comic frame structure format, whereas comic books are theoretically supposed to be entertaining. Also, Maus uses a

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    characters can be seen vividly throughout the novel. This is unique because it can appeal to a variety of ages. It can be relatable to many because of the relationships. The relationships established in Maus are those of father son, wife husband, mother son, including Nazi's Jewish relationships. In “Maus”, Art Spiegelman was inspired by multiple ideas, such as relationships, the Holocaust, and to tell his story via graphic novel in such a manner relatable to general readers. Maintaining and building

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    in each text to represent the life writing genre through the use of genre conventions. Maus, Oranges and Sunshine, and Reckoning are three very different books which represent the life writing genre. The key themes and ideas in the life writing genre are often to help the reader understand who the author really is and why they act that way and also to come to terms with the effects of the past as seen in Maus and Reckoning. A way in which all the books are similar is that they all have something

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