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Reconstructivist Art: Maus

Art Spiegelman’s “Maus” as an example of Reconstructivist Art

Experimental cartoonist Art Spiegelman shocked both his underground fan base and mainstream America with his emotional portrait of his parent’s lives during the Holocaust told in graphic-novel (comic-book) format.

Reconstructivist Elements:

  1. Nod to Artifice: Spiegelman appears as a character in the book(s) and comments on his troubles writing it.
  2. Classic Structure: Unlike most prior graphic novels, “Maus” deals with a true story, told with gritty realism, and in a fairly straightforward fashion.
  3. Transcontextual and Iconic Elements: Cartooning is by nature an iconic art, and Spiegelman makes defiantly non-ironic use of its many conventions, including the use of anthropomorphic animals to portray the story’s characters.
  4. Moments of Genuine Emotion or Significance: Few were able to read Maus without being moved by the starkness of the book’s tragedies, and the humane qualities of its narrative.

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One Comment

  1. Matthew Leon Knopps wrote:

    Hello, I am currently researching the comic “Maus” for a research paper, in a American Modern, Art History Class. And I was just curious if there were any online sources that I could use to read the novel?

    Thank you.
    -Knopps

    Friday, October 7, 2011 at 9:57 pm | Permalink

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