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Maus: A
Survivor's Tale
I: My Father Bleeds History
160
pages; ISBN 0-394-74723-2
by Art Spiegelman
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Guide
Contents:
Note
to Teachers
Preparing to read
Getting the story:
Prologue
The Sheik
The Honeymoon
Prisoner of War
The Noose Tightens
Mouse Holes
Mouse Trap
The characters of Maus I
For in-class discussion
For further reading
In Maus I: My Father
Bleeds History Art Spiegelman has simultaneously expanded the boundaries
of a literary form and found a new way of imagining the Holocaust, an
event that is commonly described as unimaginable. The form is the comic
book, once dismissed as an entertainment for children and regarded as
suited only for slapstick comedy, action-adventure, or graphic horror.
And although Maus includes elements of humor and suspense, the
horror it envisions is far worse than anything encountered in the pages
of Stephen King: it is horror that happened; horror perpetrated by real
people against millions of other real people; horror whose contemplation
inevitably forces us to ask what human beings are capable of perpetratingand
surviving.
Maus has
recognized the true nature of that riddle by casting its protagonists
as animalsmice, cats, pigs, and dogs. As Spiegelman has said (in
an interview in The New Comics, p. 191): "To use these ciphers, the
cats and mice, is actually a way to allow you past the cipher at the
people who are experiencing it." When Maus first appeared as
a three-page comic strip in an underground anthology, the words "Nazi"
and "Jew" were never mentioned. Spiegelman's animals permit readers
to bypass the question of what human beings can or cannot do and at
the same time force them to confront it more directly. His Jewish mice
are a barbed response to Hitler's statement "The Jews are undoubtedly
a race, but they are not human." His feline Nazis remind us that the
Germans' brutality was at bottom no more explicable than the delicate
savagery of cats toying with their prey. And although Vladek Spiegelman
and his family initially seem even more human than the rest of us, as
the story unfolds they become more and more like animals, driven into
deeper and deeper hiding places, foraging for scarcer and scarcer scraps
of sustenance, betraying all the ties that we associate with humanity.
Many books and films
about the Holocaust founder on its hugeness: those caught up in it blur
into a faceless mass of victims and victimizers. But Maus is
the particular story of one survivor, Vladek Spiegelman, a young man
who treated his mistress badly and may have married for money, whom
we first see in his stubborn, tight-fisted, infuriatingly manipulative
old age. Because he is not a saint, what happens to Vladek is all the
more horrible. And by its very nature the comic book is a specific medium,
in which even the slightest background details tell a story of their
own. Students who read Maus will come away knowing the workings
of the ghetto black market, the architecture of false-walled bunkers,
and what was happening in the town squares where Polish Jews lined up
patiently for deportation. They will know the words on the sign above
the gate to Auschwitz: "Arbeit Macht Frei""Work Makes You Free."
In addition, Maus
is the story of the aged Vladek's tortured relations with his son, Artie,
who is both a character in this book and its narrator; with his first
wife, Anja, who killed herself twenty-three years after leaving Auschwitz;
and with his long-suffering second wife, Mala, who reminds Artie that
Vladek's cheapness and paranoia are not wholly attributable to his ordeal.
The elderly Vladek's conversations with his son give the Holocaust narrative
a frame and also an ironic depth. Vladek and his son are at odds, and
what stands between them is Vladek's unexamined past, which has left
deep wounds in both of them. Maus is subtitled "a survivor's
tale," and the survivor is not just Vladek; it is also his son. In reading
this simple book, students are driven to ask large and complex questions
about the nature of survival, about suffering and the moral choices
that people make in response to it. They are compelled to consider the
terrible relation between history and the real human beings who are
history's casualties.
The questions, exercises,
and assignments that follow are designed to guide your students through
Maus. Although the author has expressed a reluctance to have his
work used as "Holocaust 101," the book inevitably raises questions about
the Holocaust. You may, in addition, wish to have your class compare Maus
with books and films like Schindler's List, The Painted Bird, Sophie's
Choice, or Elie Wiesel's Night, and have them supplement their reading
with such nonfiction resources as the film documentaries Shoah and Night
and Fog, or Raul Hilberg's The Destruction of the European Jews.
At the same time,
Maus is a work of art, one that should be considered as both
text and drawing. Many of the questions below call attention to Spiegelman's
use of comic-book conventions, to the artist's selection of background
detail, close-ups, juxtapositions, and symbolic devices. You may find
that many of your students are more conversant with these devices than
you yourself are, since comics may still be a regular part of their
reading. Among other things, Maus will give your students a chance
to analyze everyday, popular culture by the same aesthetic standards
that are ordinarily applied to Literature with a capital "L." The results,
we hope, will enrich their understanding of both.
"Prologue"
- What is your
first impression of Vladek Spiegelman? What does his remark about
friends suggest about his personality? How does it foreshadow revelations
later in the book?
"The
Sheik"
- What has happened
to Artie's mother?
- How does Vladek
get along with Mala, his second wife? What kind of things do they
argue about?
- How long has
it been since Artie last visited his father? What do you think is
responsible for their separation?
- How does Vladek
respond when Artie first asks him about his life in Poland? Why might
he be reluctant to talk about those years?
- On page 12 we
see a close-up of Vladek as he pedals his exercise bicycle. What is
the meaning of the numbers tattooed on his wrist? How does this single
image manage to convey information that might occupy paragraphs of
text?
- Describe Vladek's
relationship with Lucia Greenberg. How was he introduced to Anja Zylberberg?
Why do you think he chose her over Lucia?
"The
Honeymoon"
- What is Vladek
doing when Artie comes to visit him? How does his health figure elsewhere
in the book?
- How does Vladek
become wealthy?
- What does Vladek
see while traveling through Czechoslovakia?
- Why does the
artist place a swastika in the background of the panels that depict
the plight of Jews in Hitler's Germany (p. 33)? Why, on page 125,
is the road that Vladek and Anja travel on their way back to Sosnowiec
also shaped like a swastika? What other symbolic devices does the
author use in this book?
"Prisoner
of War"
- When Artie refused
to finish his food as a child, what did Vladek do? How does he characterize
Anja's leniency with their son?
- Why was Vladek's
father so reluctant to let him serve in the Polish army? What means
did he use to keep him out?
- What is the meaning
of the beard and skullcap that Vladek's father is shown wearing in
the panels on page 46? What happens to his beard later on?
- How does Vladek
feel after shooting the German soldier?
- How did the Germans
treat Vladek and other Jewish prisoners after transporting them to
the Reich? How was this different from their treatment of Polish P.O.W.'s?
- What is the significance
of Vladek's dream about his grandfather? What recurring meaning does
"Parshas Truma" have in his life?
- How does Vladek
arrange to be reunited with his wife and son? What visual device does
Spiegelman use to show him disguising himself as a Polish Gentile?
"The
Noose Tightens"
- Describe the
activities depicted in the family dinner scene on pages 74-76. What
do they tell you about the Zylberbergs?
- Although Jews
were allowed only limited rations under the Nazi occupation, Vladek
manages to circumvent these restrictions for a while. What methods
does he use to support himself and his family?
- During the brutal
mass arrest depicted on page 80, Vladek is framed by a panel shaped
like a Jewish star. How does this device express his situation at
that moment?
- What happened
to little Richieu? When Vladek begins telling this story on page 81,
the first three rows of panels are set in the past, while the bottom
three panels return us to the present and show the old Vladek pedaling
his stationary bicycle. Why do you think Spiegelman chooses to conclude
this anecdote in this manner?
- What happened
to Vladek's father? What does the scene on pages 90-91 suggest about
the ways in which some Jews died and others survived?
"Mouse
Holes"
- This chapter
and the one that follows both have the word "mouse" in their titles.
And, in fact, in the concluding sections of this book Spiegelman's
mice seem to become more "mouse-like." How does the author accomplish
this? What reason might he have for doing so?
- Why does Artie
claim that he became an artist?
- How does the
comic strip "Prisoner on the Hell Planet" depict Artie and his family?
How did you feel on learning that Artie has been hospitalized for
a nervous breakdown? Why do you think he has chosen to draw himself
dressed in a prison uniform? What is the effect of seeing these mice
suddenly represented as human beings?
- Why did Anja
finally consent to send Richieu away? Was his death "better" than
the fate of the children depicted on page 108?
- Describe the
strategies that Vladek used to conceal Anja and himself during the
liquidation of the ghetto. How did the Germans flush them from hiding?
- What eventually
happens to the "mouse" who informed on the Spiegelmans? What becomes
of Haskel, who refused to save Vladek's in-laws even though he accepted
their jewels?
- What does the
incident on pages 118 and 119 tell us about relations between Jews
and Germans? Does the knowledge that some Nazis fraternized with their
victims make their crimes more or less horrible?
- How did Vladek
care for Anja after the destruction of the Srodula ghetto? Contrast
his behavior toward his first wife, during the worst years of the
war, with the way he now treats Mala.
"Mouse
Trap"
- What does Vladek
mean when he says that reading Artie's comic makes him "interested"
in his own story (p. 133)? Is this statement just a product of broken
English, or does it reveal some deeper truth about what happens when
we record our personal histories?
- On page 136 Vladek
says that he was able to pass for a member of the Gestapo but that
Anja's appearance was more Jewish. What visual device does Spiegelman
use to show the difference between them?
- Given the fact
that the Spiegelmans are "mice," what is the significance of the panels
on page 147, in which Vladek and Anja's hiding place turns out to
be infested with rats? Why might the author have portrayed this incident?
- On page 149 Vladek
is almost betrayed by a group of schoolchildren. What stories did
Poles tell their children about Jews? How do you think such storiesand
perhaps similar stories told by German parentshelped pave the
way for the Final Solution?
- Why does Vladek
want to flee to Hungary? How are he and Anja eventually captured?
What is the significance of the letter from Mandelbaum's nephew (p.
154)?
- Why does Artie
call his father a murderer? Is he justified? Who else has he called
a murderer, and why?
The
characters of Maus I
- What kind of
manor mouseis Vladek Spiegelman? What details does Spiegelman
use to establish his character? What traits do you think enabled him
to survive events in which the overwhelming majority of Jews were
killed?
- The opening pages
of Maus portray Vladek Spiegelman as an old man. Only later,
when Vladek is telling his story, do we see him as he was in his thirties.
What differences do you see between the old Vladek and the young one
who emerges in his memories? How do you account for these changes
in his character?
- How does Spiegelman
establish the old Vladek's "foreignness"? In what specific ways, for
example, does his speech differ from his son's? Why does the author
show the young, remembered Vladek, as well as his family, speaking
"normal" English?
- How would you
sum up the character of Artie? How would you compare him with his
father? What things about Vladek irritate him? Which of Artie's traits
does Vladek seem incapable of understanding? In what ways do you think
Vladek has influenced his son?
- How does the
author portray Anja as a young woman, and later as a depressed and
suicidal older one? How are your earlier perceptions of her altered
by the comic-within-a-comic "Prisoner on the Hell Planet"? If Anja
had written a suicide note, what might it have said?
For
in-class discussion
- What does Maus
do that pure text narratives cannot? In what ways do Spiegelman's
crude drawings help us visualize things that words alone, or more
"realistic" images, might be unable to portray? How does Maus
differ, both in its subject matter and visual format, from other comic
books you have read?
- One of the problems
inherent in representing human beings as cats and mice is that animals
have a narrower range of facial expression. Are Spiegelman's animals
as emotionally expressive as human characters might be? If so, what
means does the cartoonist use to endow his mice and cats with "human"
characteristics?
- On page 23, Vladek
asks his son to refrain from telling the story of his youthful involvement
with Lucia Greenberg, claiming that "it has nothing to do with Hitler,
with the Holocaust." Artie argues that this story "makes everything
more human." Which of these statements do you agree with? Should the
Holocaust be treated as an event so catastrophic that it makes private
experience irrelevant? How do other books and films about the Holocaust,
like Schindler's List, Night, or The Painted Bird, deal with this
predicament?
- Why do you think
some Jews assisted the Germans, either by policing the ghettos or
by informing on their people (see pp. 113 and 117)? Why might Vladek
still send gift packages to Haskel, who betrayed his in-laws (p. 118)?
In Vladek's place, would you do the same thing?
- Maus contains
several moments of comedy. Most of these take place during the exchanges
between Artie, Vladek, and Mala. But humor even finds a place in the
ghetto and the bunker, for example on page 119, when the cake sold
to the starving Jews of Srodula turns out to have been made with laundry
soap. What is the effect of this humor? Was it inaccurate or "wrong"
of Spiegelman to have included such episodes within his survivor's
tale?
For
further study
- Keep a journal
recording your responses to Maus I. If you were initially startled
or put off by seeing the cartoon format used in the service of material
that is profoundly serious, did those feelings change in the course
of your reading? At what point, if any, did you find yourself accepting
Spiegelman's visual and dramatic conventions? You may wish to put
away your journal for a few weeks and then reread them, while skimming
through Maus a second time. Do the responses you first recorded
still hold true? In what ways has the book stayed with you?
- On page 33, a
character says, "There's a pogrom going on in Germany today." The
Random House Dictionary defines "pogrom," a word of Russian origin,
as "an organized massacre, especially of Jews." Elsewhere it defines
"the Holocaust" as "the systematic mass slaughter of European Jews
in Nazi concentration camps during World War II." How well do these
definitions describe the events through which Vladek Spiegelman lived?
Using independent research, describe the difference between a pogrom
and the Holocaust. Why are such wordsalong with others like
"victim," "survivor," and "genocide"considered controversial
today?
- The situation
of Polish Jews worsens steadily and dramatically throughout Maus,
a deterioration that is aptly summed up by the chapter heading "The
Noose Tightens." Chart the progress of this escalation, citing specific
incidents in the book. What happens to Spiegelman's mice as they are
forced deeper into "mouse holes"? In what way do they become more
"mouse-like"? How might they have responded differently if the Germans
had begun their program of mass extermination from the start?
- Most art and
literature about the Holocaust is governed by certain unspoken rules.
Among these are the notions that the Holocaust must be portrayed as
an utterly unique event; that it must be depicted with scrupulous
accuracy, and with the utmost seriousness, so as not to obscure its
enormity or dishonor its dead. In what way does Maus obey,
violate, or disprove these "rules"?
- Over the next
month, interview a parent or grandparent about an episode of his or
her life. Record not only the story that emerges, but your responses
to that story. In what way is that story also your own?
This teacher's
guide was written by Peter Trachtenberg. Peter Trachtenberg has taught
writing and literature at the New York University School of Continuing
Education, the Johns Hopkins University School of Continuing Education,
and the School of Visual Arts..
Copyright ©
1994 by PANTHEON BOOKS
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