Maus ends without resolving all tensions that occurred during the novel. When Vladek calls Art Richieu, there are many questions going through my mind. Does it mean Art will never replace the void that Richieu left in their lives? Or maybe has Vladek finally accepted Art as a son that Richieu once was?
Art Spiegelman also ends Maus with Vladek and Anja’s tombstones dividing the last two panels. He finishes his story with “happily ever after.” We all know that the couple doesn’t have a happily ever after because Anja commits suicide in 1968. Spiegelman could have possibly used the words “happily ever after” because the reality is that there isn’t a happy ending. Not only was their reunion not a fair representation, but it is insensitive to those who lost their families and had nothing to go back to. It shows that a story about the Holocaust cannot have a happy ending. It is something so horrific and atrocious that there is no way that a happy ending could ever be possible.
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The Frank Family |
I like how you compared the ending of Maus to a fairytale. This is accurate because this what all Holocaust families ideally wanted, but many of them weren’t as lucky as Anja and Vladek. I also agree that even though Vladek narrates their reunion as “happily ever after”, they are still haunted by war images that diminish their individual happiness.
ReplyDeleteI really liked how you were able to relate this back to Anne Frank is an original thought of way. Also I really liked how you found details that were not noticeable the first time you read the page and how you analyzed them.
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