Art Spiegelman's Maus

Words: 314
Pages: 2

In Art Spiegelman’s second volume of Maus, he continues to recount his father’s experiences of the Holocaust through Auschwitz, various camps, death marches, and liberation. Spiegelman depicts how Vladek’s experiences and his memory of the Holocaust created long-lasting effects on him, resulting in his anxious personality and troublesome relationship with his son. The author intertwines the past and the present, illustrating how past experiences have great influence on the present. Vladek's traumatizing experiences throughout the Holocaust, such as starvation, have persisting effects on his everyday life many years later. After Vladek realizes that the cereal he had purchased was going to go to waste, he returns the cereal and other partially