Analysis Of Maus: The Horrors Of The Holocaust

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Maus:The Horrors of the Holocaust The story Maus is a graphic novel about a son Artie interviewing his father Vladek because Vladek survived the Holocaust. Vladek is explaining to Artie what his life was like during the Holocaust for him and his family. Vladek was the only one left still alive during this time to tell the story to Artie. The story has many different links to the history of the Holocaust and helps readers understand the horrible facts these families had to face. Since it is from the perspective of someone who lived through it, it helps the reader understand really just what was going on in this time. The graphic novel Maus by Art Spiegelman offers the modern reader a unique window showing the horrors and the history of the Holocaust and its repercussions by the differences of Vladek’s past and present, the value of luck, guilt that Artie and Vladek felt, and the mice characters being a representation during this time of racism. The novel had two different …show more content…

Not only Racism but how the Nazis defined Jews. According to Hunt, el at, on page 851 explains in Hitler’s 1938 speech the reason for targeting Jews was “bases on the greatest of scientific knowledge” Hitler was trying to make what he was doing okay. Just like the novel Maus explains racism it is very similar to what the Textbook says about Hitler “Hitler attacked many ethnic and social groups, but he took anti-Semitism to new and frightening heights” (Hunt, el at. 851-852). The Making of the West is a good source because it is talking about the same time period but from different prospectives. Also The Making of the West explains that the Jews were forced into slave labor and as Vladek says in the book he was forced to prison camps where they all thought they were going to be killed. That is why the author to Maus made the Jews the mice and the German Nazis the

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