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Lädt ... Maus I: A Survivor's Tale: My Father Bleeds History (Original 1986; 1986. Auflage)von Art Spiegelman
Werk-InformationenMaus, Bd.1, Mein Vater kotzt Geschichte aus von Art Spiegelman (1986)
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Pulitzer Prize Special Citations and Awards This book is good for students at an advanced level. It tells the story of someone who went through the Holocaust and shows how people survived during that time in history. People from different countries are represented as various animals. For example, Jews are portrayed as mice, and Nazis are portrayed as predatory cats. I would introduce this book to my classroom as a read-aloud to guide and help my students through the important themes and contexts throughout this story. This book tells the story of a holocaust survivor through the form of a graphic novel. The art represents Jews as mice and the Nazis as cats. The story goes through all the things that the authors father had to do to survive and everything his family went through and all the people they lost. I would use this book in an 8th grade classroom or older because of the more serious themes in it and there is a slight amount of language. (159 pages) This is a great look into Nazi-occupied Poland in the '30s and '40s. It's also a touching story of an adult son trying to get closer to his father. I'll be honest, I picked this up because it was on the "banned books" table. I don't think we should limit what people can write or read. I struggle to see what should be banned about this book. It's a historically accurate depiction of an individual's life going through a horrible time in recent history. MAUS I surprised me. Even though I thought I knew pieces and portions about the Holocaust quite well, this is different. MAUS I is an auto- and biography that covered the past of his parents and the present of their relationship. The author and illustrator, Art Spiegelman, drew himself, his wife, Françoise Mouly, his dad Vladek, and his dad’s second wife, Mala, into the book. The chaotic interviews and hostility-filled interactions are included. Art’s mom, Anya, committed suicide when he was 20, leaving behind the grief-stricken Vladek. The generational trauma affected not just his parents but also placed demands and expectations on Art. Especially after Anya’s death, father and son became estranged, miraculously coming together for these interviews. Book I also surprised me that Vladek (and Anya) Spiegelman went multiple rounds from being drafted in Poland, caught and became prisoner of war, released, reunited with Anya and extended family, hiding, escaping, and more, before finally being caught and sent to Auschwitz. Book I doesn’t even include the Auschwitz portion yet, and it was incredibly powerful. I was floored by all their efforts to evade capture. MAUS is the first and, thus far, only graphic novel to have won the Pulitzer Prize. MAUS became famous in recent years as a banned book. Naturally, I read MAUS because of that. Thank you to the idiots who banned it and inspired me to read an excellent book! A note to parents: Even though Art Spiegelman used mice to depict Jews, cats to depict Germans, and pigs to depict Poles, the hostility, fear, and violence are obvious. Art also included the pages of his short graphic strip that addressed his mother’s suicide, including himself in a prisoner’s striped outfit, since he had left the state mental hospital just months before and was living at home. This portion is blunt and graphic with his mother found naked in the bathroom in a pool of blood. This portion is in human figures.
Making a Holocaust comic book with Jews as mice and Germans as cats would probably strike most people as flippant, if not appalling. ''Maus: A Survivor's Tale'' is the opposite of flippant and appalling. To express yourself as an artist, you must find a form that leaves you in control but doesn't leave you by yourself. That's how ''Maus'' looks to me - a way Mr. Spiegelman found of making art. Gehört zur ReiheGehört zu VerlagsreihenIst enthalten inMaus von Art Spiegelman Hat ein Nachschlage- oder BegleitwerkHat einen LehrerleitfadenAuszeichnungenBemerkenswerte Listen
The author-illustrator traces his father's imprisonment in a Nazi concentration camp through a series of disarming and unusual cartoons arranged to tell the story as a novel. Keine Bibliotheksbeschreibungen gefunden. |
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Google Books — Lädt ... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)741.5973The arts Graphic arts and decorative arts Drawing & drawings Cartoons, Caricatures, Comics Collections North American United States (General)Klassifikation der Library of Congress [LCC] (USA)BewertungDurchschnitt:
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