Generational trauma is a really common, and thorough idea that lingers within people from all different walks, especially in those that live ‘better’ lives than their parents or ancestors. I think that generational trauma shows up in a multitude of different ways for different people; Spiegelman highlighting specifically detachment, guilt, and argument. We see the idea of detachment expressed in the structuring of Maus. The block structure of a cartoon alone does this, but I think that Spiegelman uses this medium in order to add depth to both him and Vladek’s trauma. For example, in the scene with Vladek talking about his first son, we see him in three separate blocks pedaling faster and faster as if trying to get away from the memory of his dead son. In doing so, I think that Spiegleman is showing us a much broader concept within generational trauma which is detachment. There is a common response from those who’ve experienced trauma to detach themselves from it, as if what happened was another lifetime or almost another person. While Vladek goes into immense detail of his experience, the flashes to the present day show us a colder, disconnected personality. I think this becomes an inner monologue for the children of survivors who unconsciously separate themselves from their family’s trauma. In my own experience, I see this happen by family just not acknowledging or talking about the things that have happened. For those that went through the trauma, it is most likely a coping mechanism, a way to move on. But for the children of survivors, who didn’t actually experience the events, I think this becomes a detachment from the family; because they can’t have the emotions of someone who lived through the trauma, they instead learn to keep that pain hidden.
This idea goes hand in hand with a second idea Speigelman writes about, which is guilt. Based on Maus, and other stories I’ve read, I think that for children of Holocaust survivors, guilt seems to be one of the biggest weights they hold. There seems to be a guilt of ‘not suffering enough’; where children can never really complain or have struggles, because their problems are too small compared to that of their ancestors. There also seems to be a guilt of “fixing trauma”, where children feel powerless to help their obviously suffering parents. We see this with Artie, who really struggles to not only help his father, but find empathy for him after years of traumatic behavior. He gets really frustrated and annoyed with his dad, which I think comes from a place of wanting to fix him, but also wanting his father to already be ‘fixed’. In his article Intergenerational transmission of trauma in Spiegelman's Maus, Stanislav expands on this idea of guilt by talking about Artie’s meetings with a psychoanalyst. “The psychoanalyst suggests that even Art’s father feels guilty because he has survived while the others have not. Clinical studies describe how many survivors suffer from a sense of guilt for the same reason; however, Pavel’s point is that Vladek has transmitted his own survivor’s guilt onto Art. Art’s meetings with the psychoanalyst indicate that he defends himself against total identification with the victims of the Holocaust” (Stanislav 232). From this analysis, I think it is clear that guilt is such a deep, unclear thing that often leaves permanent marks on generations.
This leads me to the last point Spiegleman illustrates which is argument. Arguably, I think that this is one of the more common outcomes of generational trauma. Different perspectives on survival, identity, guilt, and emotions cause riff between most parent-child relationships, but with Vladek and Artie, carry an intense layer: genocide. Vladek’s world has been shaped by the Holocaust, and so everything will lead back to that experience for him. But for Artie, because of that detachment to the Holocaust, and guilt he carries to ‘fix’ it, I think his father’s trauma inadvertently feels like a burden or dark cloud that always hangs over them. Because of this, arguments are often and intense, which obviously is painful for both sides in this relationship, and seems to me a more tangible evidence of generational trauma- whether acknowledged or not.
To conclude, I think that generational trauma is not something that can be moved on from because it is ingrained in each partys’ brain, whether it shows up in fears, resentment, behaviors, or emotion. What’s more important, I think, is that we understand how this trauma has affected our relationships, and that we can speak about our different perspectives.