Art Spiegelman's "The Story of Survivors" is a very successful explanation of Vladek's experience during the Holocaust period. It tells the story of the survivors of the Jewish Holocaust and his son, a cartoonist who turned his father's story into a cartoon book. As my son, art thought that this event was terrible and very interesting, he felt that other people should read it from the mouth of a real survivor. This story goes back and forth between now and the war. The artist constantly visits his father and records part of his story but these visits become strained because he does not have a good relationship with his father.
These words were made by Voradex Peegerman at the end of Art Spiegelman's "Mother: The Story of Survivors". After Vladek met with his wife Anja, they said that. During and after the Holocaust, the majority of Vladek's stories developed around him and his wife Anja's wish. Splagelman showed the importance of the relationship between Anja and Vladek. Because Vladek said verbally he wanted to be with Anja in the whole book, then escaped from prison, and Auschwitz returned to her again. However, Spiegelman is not only using iterative words to emphasize the relationship between Vladek and Anja. In order to visually emphasize the relationship between Anja and Vladek and the importance of Holocaust's severity, Art Spiegelman uses a common silent movie theme. It combines the iris effect with the dramatic visual effect and silence.
Spigman was born in Stockholm, Sweden in 1948. They are all Holocaust survivors Vladek and Anja Spiegelman. When I was young, his family moved to the United States and grew up in Rego Park, New York. At the age of 13, Spearman was preparing a school newspaper, but sold his work to the Long Island Post when he was 14 years old. He studied at Art and Design High School in New York and later went to Harper College (now Pennsylvania State University in Pennsylvania). After leaving Harpur in 1968, Spiegelman began working for Topps, a novel trading card company he worked together for the next 25 years. Also in 1968, Spiegelman 's mother Anja committed suicide. His father later married the survivor of the Holocaust. In the 1970s, Spiegelman participated in the underground cartoon movement and was welcomed by artists like Robert Kram. The couple have two children, Najah and Dashiel.
For our father, let's take a look at Vladek Spiegelman, a real life father who is the story of Art Spiegelman's Maus: survivors. Mouse is a non-fiction novel about slaughter written in manga book. In this book, Jews are depicted as rats and Germans are depicted as cats. Art Spiegelman can see the interesting pictures of his father's frustration and Auschwitz's life through the eyes of Vladek. Vladek is irritated, seems like a criticized and embarrassed old man, but you see how witness like his MacGyver helps him withstand the storm at a refugee camp. He may be a bit uncomfortable like his father - but Vladek proved to be a great man.