Maus and the legitimation of the graphic novel


Reading Maus really opened my eyes to how prejudice and its normalization in society could potentially turn into something devastating like a massive genocide. Vladek's story held no punches in regards to how real and honest it was. With the depictions of Americans as dogs and the polish people as pigs, Spiegelman didn't care about being politically correct and he wasn't trying to be offensive either, he simply recounted what happened to his father thru his own father's perspective. A very black and white and full of stereotypes point of view. I'm kind of afraid of how the political climate is looking now a days and this story is a scary reminder that racism in any shape or form in a collective and the slow acceptance of it could lead to something  horrible. Overall Maus was a scary read and I'm not really sure if could come back to it but I really think it's a necessary read.

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