Maus Reflection Feedback Response
Originally posted by Pistachio on February 11, 2025 13:44
I believe there's a sort of beauty in expressing such a grim matter in such a more “childish” art form. Symbolically, I think Spiegelman is trying to say how things that take place in the book, and during the Holocaust, cannot be escaped by anyone, even children as comics are accessible even to them. Aside from the symbolic meaning, comic form as a whole allows for a lot more expression than a full writing piece. It adds a layer of realism by being able to see the emotions on the characters faces as opposed to having it described to you in a novel. I think if the book was in a novel form rather than comic it would make it feel a lot less real and almost disconnected in a sense. Visually being able to see these people being lined up and fated for essentially what is execution is just a terrifying situation. Also through the comic format, Spiegelman is able to use the metaphor of different groups being different animals. Since it isn’t explicitly said, but rather something the reader will just notice by looking at the panels, it is quite hard to pull something like this in a full word form. In a graphic novel, Jews being mice, or the prey, and Germans being cats, or the hunters, spoke and put into perspective how the situation often felt. It was a game of cat and mouse for Jews trying to escape and often times when they felt safe they never truly were, like how Vladek was “offered” to sleep in a hole behind the barn by a farmer, only to later be outed out by the same farmer who supposedly didn’t care nor wanted any trouble. These depictions of these different groups not only allowed readers to see the power dynamic but also made it so that readers are able to disconnect from their experience. Our generation is not Holocaust survivors and I doubt we will ever be able to understand their trauma or pain. Had the characters been human, we may have been more inclined to try and relate to them, but we can’t, their experiences are completely different from ours. We can try to understand and process what happened but at the end of the day, they live in different worlds than us and these depictions achieve that message, similar to the dynamic Artie has with his father. Speaking of the father son relationship, Spiegelman constantly shifts between the past and present. This could be brushed off as simply done for fluidity but it can also be attributed to demonstrate generational trauma. As said in “The Shadow of a Past Time”, “ Comics are composed in panels--also called frames--and in gutters, the rich empty spaces between the selected moments that direct our interpretation. The effect of the gutter lends to comics it's ‘annotation’ of time and space” (Chute 7). The comic format is a way to frame individual moments and highlight them but that doesn’t altogether separate them from other events. Artie will never be able to escape his legacy of being a child of a Holocaust survivor, this book is very proof of that. Just as how his father will never be able to escape the horrors and memories from the Holocaust itself. It’s all a loop, Artie and Vladek are connected and although they lived completely different lives they share the same horror that they cannot escape. Also the novel format relies heavily on imagery and using one's imagination to picture the events in the novel. I think Spiegelman wants to get away from that because the events of the Holocaust were very real and not so much as a fantasy as it seems to my generation. The comic form also makes these horrific events a lot more digestible. There’s a lot less processing, reading, and analyzing than a full word form would require. It allows people to be able to take the meaning of the book a lot more easily without taking away from the severity and message of the book itself. Although a comic form is “immature” or “childish”, sometimes for people to be able to understand important and heavy events such as these, they must be simple. Comic format achieves that.
In Pistachio’s post, I liked how they noted the realism that is added by the comic illustrations, despite the drawings not being exactly how they were – with the animal allegories for example. I agree with this idea. I think that there is a certain emotion that this story being a comic conveys that it can’t if it were just a novel. I also liked the point made about the constant flashbacks and flashforwards between Vladek’s story and the present - how it reflects the generational trauma that Artie faces by being the child of Holocaust survivors. The comic panels frame the individual moment, but connect through the story, weaving the moments together. Artie can not escape this so it affects his life greatly. I saw several similar responses conveying similar sentiments - where the comic component adds something that only words can and that Artie will always struggle with generational trauma. Generally, I think that our views are similar, in that I agreed and said many similar points in my response. I particularly liked how this response combined both prompts, having the comic form be a metaphor for generational trauma is something that I did not consider but find to be incredibly compelling.