Maus and the Nature of Regret
(I use ‘Spiegelman’ when referring to the author, and ‘Art’ when referring to his depiction in the book)
What is Maus?
In Maus
by Art Spiegelman, he shows his father, Vladek’s experience in the Concentration
camps in World War Two. It’s in the form of a visual novel, which allows for
more visual metaphors and other things like that. But if you’re reading this,
you probably already know this, so let’s get into it.
In the beginning
of chapter 2 of volume 2, there’s this small intermission where Art talks about
how his father died before he wrote this part and what happened in his life
since the release of Volume 1. He then has an exchange with his therapist where
he talks about his kind of survivor’s guilt, wondering if he should finish the
book at all. Throughout this whole section, Spiegelman portrays himself at different
ages depending on how he’s feeling. For Example, He looks like a child
throughout most of the Therapist section because he’s feeling vulnerable but
returns to full size at the end because he is ultimately a little better because
of it. Then comes the part I want to talk about.
The Part That I Want to talk about
These panels also caught my attention. I think it's incredible how just a simple "sigh" is enough for Art to explain to the audience/reader how he felt while listening to the recordings.
ReplyDeleteI had the same reaction as i was reading the comic. The page 47 really caught my attections with the masks and how small the author is
ReplyDeleteI agree with all of your points you stated about those 4 images. These images were definitely eye popping to me and I especially like your final sentence of how Artie wanted the information about his father more than his father himself. Great job!
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