Вы находитесь на странице: 1из 2

Maus

Berlatsky, Eric. “Memory as Forgetting: The Problem of the Postmodern in Kundera’s The Book
of Laughter and Forgetting and Spiegelman’s Maus.” Cultural Critique. 55. Fall 2003.

Bosmajian, Hamida. “The Orphaned Voice in Art Spiegelman's Maus I and II.” Literature and
Psychology. 44.1-2. 1998.

Boyd, Brian. “Art and Evolution: Spiegelman's The Narrative Corpse.” Philosophy and Literature.
32.1. April 2008.

Budick, E. Miller. “Forced Confessions: The Case of Art Spiegelman's Maus.” Prooftexts. 21.3. Fall
2001.

Doherty, Thomas. “Art Spiegelman's Maus: Graphic Art and the Holocaust.” American Literature. 68.
1996.

Elmwood, Victoria A. “’Happy, Happy, Ever After’: The Transformation of Trauma Between
the Generations in Art Spiegelman’s Maus: A Survivor’s Tale. Biography. 27.4. Fall
Fall 2004.

Ewert, Jeanne C. “Reading Visual Narrative: Art Spiegelman's Maus.” Narrative. 8. 2000.

Harrison, Keith. “Telling the Untellable: Spiegelman's Maus.” Rendezvous: Journal of Arts and Letters.
34.1. 1999.

Hatfield, Charles. “Comic Art, Children’s Literature, and the New Comic Studies.” The Lion and
the Unicorn. 30.3 September 2006.

Hirsch, Marianne. “Family Pictures: Maus, Mourning, and Post-Memory.” Discourse. 15.2. 1992-1993.

Iadosini, Rick. “Bleeding History and Owning His [Father's] Story: Maus and Collaborative
Autobiography.” The CEA Critic. 57.1. 1994.

Levine, Michael G. “Necessary Stains: Spiegelman’s Maus and the Bleeding of History.”
American Imago. 59.3. Fall 2002.

Martin, Richard. “Art Spiegelman's Maus, or 'The Way It Happened.'” Historiographic Metafiction in
Modern American and Canadian Literature. Bernd Engler and Kurt Muller, eds. Paderborn:
Ferdinand Schoningh, 1994.

McGlothlin, Erin Heather. “No Time Like the Present: Narrative and Time in Art Spiegelman’s
Maus.” Narrative. 11.2. May 2003.

Rosen, Alan. “The Language of Survival: English as Metaphor in Spiegelman's Maus.” Prooftexts. 5.
1995.

Staub, Michael E. “The Shoah Goes On and On: Remembrance and Representation in Art Spiegelman's
Maus. Melus. 20.3. 1995.
Tabachnick, Stephen Ely. “Of Maus and Memory: The Structure of Art Spiegelman's Graphic Novel of
the Holocaust.” Word and Image. 9. 1993.

Tabachnick, Stephen Ely. “The Religious Meaning of Art Spiegelman's Maus.” Shofar: An
Interdisciplinary Journal of Jewish Studies. 22.4. Summer 2004.

Witek, Joseph. “History and Talking Animals: Art Spiegelman's Maus.” Comic Books as History:

Young, James E. “The Holocaust as Vicarious Past: Art Spiegelman's Maus and the Afterimages of
History.” Critical Inquiry. 24. 1996.

Вам также может понравиться