Spiegelman 's novels never experienced the fear of the Holocaust like their fathers. Those Jews thanked the previous generation and sought ways to commemorate the martyrs who lost their lives half a century ago. The way that this generation pay homage is various. Many people have developed their own shrine for the memory of their ancestors.
Anthropomorphic graphical usage. Many graphic novels use anthropomorphic animals, inanimate objects, or concepts. In the novel by Spiegelman, he draws all Jewish figures as mice, all German characters are cats, Americans are dogs, and Britons are fish. A good way to introduce graphic novels is to look at the historical influence behind graphic symbols and the unrealistic description of how authors' ideas are conveyed. When introducing MAUS, I showed the students a series of original German, Polish, Austrian propaganda expressing Jews as mouse, mouse and other pests (many examples on the MAUS CD There is. I draw Japan as a cockroach and pest and sometimes discuss and analyze the American visual propaganda during the Second World War. (A good source of publicity in the United States and Japan is John W. Dauer's "no war: race and power in the Pacific War".)
Art Spiegelman's graphic novel "Maus" is believed to promote the media of former contemptible manga books to artistic justification and respect for the literary and art world. Maus represents Spiegelman's "Permanent Contribution to Western Manga ... redefine the media suitable for conveying the thematic theme with a problem" (Adams 2008, pp.18-19). In 1992 I studied at high school and university and received the Pulitzer Novel Prize, and the original artwork of Spiegelman was curated at gallery exhibitions all over the world.
Art Spiegelman's Maus is a masterpiece of graphic literature and is admired as the most important cartoon book of the 20th century. The popularity of Spiegelman's graphic novel was accepted and accepted it was awarded the Pulitzer Prize at the 1992 special prize. This book tells the story of Vladek Spiegelman, the author 's father, who grew up in Poland about the Jews before the influence of World War II. In addition to being a living story, the book also covers other subjects such as prejudice and interpersonal relations, unlike such adversities, racial issues, stereotypes, intergenerational perspectives. For the purposes of this article, the mouse is analyzed using a three-pronged approach. Finally, I will briefly explain how the literary and graphic aspects of the novel fit into the groundbreaking autobiographical text Maus was born.