Maus Reflection
Art Spiegelman’s use of the graphic novel format to tell a very personal and historical story about the Holocaust In Maus was a positive one, with many upsides and little downsides. Some people might question whether comics can handle such a serious subject, but Spiegelman proved that combining images and words can make it easier for us to connect to these events. The way the story changes between past and present shows how the trauma these people went through is still relevant in their lives today, affecting both survivors and their families. Speigelman’s use of Mice in the story helps divide social groups, making the mice the Jewish people and cats the German Nazis, which helps us understand who is on what “side".
The comic format helps transition between past and present. Vladek tells his son Art about his Holocaust experiences while the reader also sees their present interactions. This shows how the trauma of the past still effects Vladek’s life and his relationship with Art. In The Shadow of Past Time: History and Graphic Representation in Maus, Hillary Chute states that Maus "stages the unassimilable, the traumatic, as a narrative that remains graphic—that is, composed of drawn images." This explains that Spiegelman’s format helps make the past feel like the present, with less of a flashback feel and more of an in the moment feel. This adds to the idea that trauma does not disappear but continues to change the lives of survivors and their children every day. Spiegelman’s use of graphic art allows readers to feel eomtions and mental struggles in a way that regular books cannot. By drawing the Jews as mice, the Germans as cats, and the Polish as pigs, he highlights differences in social classes and power. This also connects to Nazi propaganda, which dehumanized Jewish people and made them the “prey", which furthers our understanding on the severity of the situation.
Some argue that comics are meant for entertainment and do not have the depth needed for discussing serious topics like the Holocaust. Spiegelman addresses this argument in Maus, when he questions whether a comic book is the right way to tell his father’s story, worrying that people would not take it serious. By including this converstion, Spiegelman shows he is aware of the controversy while proving that comics can tell deep and meaningful stories.
Although this novel does share the history of his father’s, Vladek, experiences, Art finds it hard to understand his father’s suffering and feels it is hard to put this into a story. Vladek’s short-tempered and Insensitive personality are signs of the trauma he went through, and these traits impact his relationship with Art. They often butt heads over smaller things like Art trying to move along His story and write down the important pieces, rather than taking in the full story.
Maus proves that comics can effectively tell stories about history and trauma. The use of past and present, creative visuals and personal storytelling make the Holocaust’s impact very clear to readers. The comic format does not make the story less serious, but rather allows for a different, more engaging way to understand history.