The Holocaust is known to all of us. We may know that someone has survived this terrible event in history or one knows this in school, in either case, everyone is in the middle of the Holocaust It is horrible to Nazi Jews. Please understand. The Holocaust had some damage in many people's lives, especially Vladek Spiegleman. Due to his experience during the Second World War, Vladek's personality experienced tremendous change. His personality was very energetic and the experience he experienced during the Holocaust brought him such a dramatic change.
"The world, the world is not interested in us, everything is possible today even in a crematorium" - Elie Wiesel's graphic novel "Maus" is the story of Holocaust survivor, Vladek Spiegelman. Vladek experienced the massacre and in the process lost most, if not all, of his family. Art came to his father 's house to capture the story. When I saw the beginning of the story, Artie cried because my friend left him skating shoes, my father told him, confined them in a room without food for a week together, what it is You can see, friends! "Everything is related to the massacre of Valdek, the feeling of guilt angered Artie and kept away from my father.In Maus II, Artie speaks
Art Spiegelman used comic groups in his graphic novels, Maus and Maus II, to remember his father's experience during the Holocaust period. His parents and brothers experienced genocide throughout their life and his family was severely affected by the time they spent in concentration camps. Spiegelman decided to consciously and carefully use the comic team to draw the mouse version of his father Vladek Spiegelman. His work features his father's work and looks back on his past experience. Holocaust is also common in other art forms, such as paintings, paintings, photography. Unlike other works, Speigelman's works use mice rather than humans, and in comic format they use words and their own black-and-white photos. His technique is easier to express than a single picture or picture, and you can expand stories through multiple panels.
Maus and Maus II clearly grasp experiences of life changes during the holocaust and effectively portrayed these experiences through detailed illustrations and dialogue. The book also explains how the second generation survivors can be influenced by their own massacres. I hope these books appreciate Vladek and Artie and appeal to the broad audience we will learn.