Tuesday, November 12, 2019
Out of Kansas :: Personal Narrative Papers
Out of Kansas I find it on the high bookshelfââ¬âMaus: A Survivorââ¬â¢s Tale. Iââ¬â¢ve heard about it. Itââ¬â¢s about the Holocaust. Mice play the Jews, and cats play the German Nazis. I understand it already. Cats are predators to mice. Thatââ¬â¢s easy enough. I start reading. The Polish people are pigs. Wait a minute, I donââ¬â¢t get it. Why are they pigs? Iââ¬â¢m getting confused. I want to give up. Instead, I pick it up and start again. We begin as moody troubleshooters: we see a puzzle piece that doesnââ¬â¢t fitââ¬âwe either chop off a corner or throw the thing away. What is a stereotype besides a way of grouping things in order to understand them in a complete and perfectly organized way? To say that something didnââ¬â¢t fit would be an admission that we are unsure of the world we are living inââ¬âa frightening thought. Further, we are often conditioned through art to recognize these stereotypes without thought and to react identically as a communityââ¬âa means of creating and controlling an ideal society. Theater theorist and playwright Bertolt Brecht says of European theater, ââ¬Å"It is well known that contact between audience and stage is normally made on the basis of empathyâ⬠(136). The goal is often to make audiences identify with the characters and the stories so that they will reach a natural state of controlled catharsis at the end. Many audiences have thus learned to expect and enjoy such a style. Audiences seek art that will pick them up and pull them along for the entire ride. Underground comic, illustrator, and magazine editor Art Spiegelman meets that desire in his novel-sized comic Maus. Spiegelman describes his work: ââ¬Å"The goal was to get people moving forward, to get my eye and thought organized enough so that one could relatively, seamlessly, be able to become absorbed in the narrativeâ⬠(Jun 10). A story that absorbs the audience into its own unslowing whirlwind sounds a lot like Brechtââ¬â¢s description of the cathartic theater of control. However, Spiegelmanââ¬â¢s works havenââ¬â¢t always had the same goal. In his early career, the question that motivated his art was, ââ¬Å"How many obstacles could you put in somebodyââ¬â¢s path before the reader just caved in and couldnââ¬â¢t handle it anymore?â⬠(Juno, 8). The goal was to stilt catharsisââ¬âto kill it in its tracks in order to provoke active thought. I read his 1972 comic strip à ¢â¬Å"Skinless Perkins.
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