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The Real Meaning of Spiegelman’s Maus

     

    Maus and
    Maus II are not about the Holocaust. This is a good example of how most people
    miss the point of creative writing as of parables. John Lewis and his
    publishers sought to cash in on Maus, and did, with a cheap imitation, March
    and March II, giving Lewis’s personal account of the civil rights movement. But
    it was missing the essence of Maus. They had no idea.

    Maus is a
    character study of Vladek Spiegelman.

    Anything we
    hear about the Holocaust is entirely through his eyes. And he is not driven,
    like Elie Wiesel in Night, by a sense of mission to tell us about the
    Holocaust. He is resistant to talking about it. He would rather talk about his romantic
    conquests. And he burns his wife’s painstaking accounts of it. This is not the
    action of a truth-teller.

    Vladek is a
    peculiar character. Most obviously, he is parsimonious to a comic extent. One
    might imagine this came from his experience in the camps.

    But he is
    not consistently parsimonious. He scolds his second wife, Mala, for using a
    wire coat hanger, the parsimonious choice, instead of a wooden one, to hang up
    his son’s coat.

    Then he secretly
    throws his son’s coat in the garbage. Hardly parsimonious.

    Granted, in
    the first instance, it is his son’s loss, not his own. But then he must give
    his son his own old coat.

    The real
    motive behind his parsimony is not to save money or conserve; it is to keep
    those around him constantly on edge, and subject to criticism whatever they do.
    If not being parsimonious works better every now and then, parsimony must be
    sacrificed to the higher objective. The point was to give Mala or Art that acid
    feeling in the pit of their stomach, and to delight in awareness that he is
    making them feel bad.

    Spiegelman’s
    Vladek is a perceptive portrait of just what someone who has given in to the
    vice of pride, aka hubris, aka narcissism, is like. Vladek is the type of
    Hitler; and a study of the type.

    One
    characteristic of the narcissist or vice-bound is a comically two-dimensional
    predictability. They form the humours of the comic stage. Narcissists act like NPCs.
    Vladek’s general frugality is of that order.

    Vladek appears
    first in the tale to warn his son as a child that there is no such thing as a
    friend. Hitler’s starting point in Mein Kampf: it is the natural Darwinian
    order that everyone just looks out for themselves. For individuals and for races,
    it is survival of the fittest. And this is the creed of the narcissist: it is
    them against the world.

    Moving to
    the present, Artie goes to visit his father, and his father’s first two
    sentences on seeing him after two years are complaints: first, that he is late,
    and second, that he did not being his wife. Whatever Artie does, Vladek will
    find reason to complain.

    And he is
    the same with second wife Mala, complaining about the wooden hanger. Or the
    chicken is too dry.

    The hanger
    complaint has a second function: it is meant to sow division between mother and
    child. The narcissist will always foment conflict within the family. It is a
    control thing.

    When Artie
    asks Vladek to “start with Mom. Tell me how you met,” Vladek tells him instead about
    how all the women chased him, and he had another girlfriend who desperately
    wanted to marry him and was better looking than Artie’s mother. Anja, Artie’s
    mother, was nothing to look at, and supposedly had a nervous disorder. She was,
    as far as he is concerned, lucky to have him.

    This is not
    the way a father should talk about his child’s mother. Again, he is sowing
    division within the family.

    He then obliquely
    criticizes Anja as a communist, who betrayed a friend to a three-month prison
    term. It might be true; but even if so why tell it unprompted? The point of
    this story seem to be to belittle the other parent in the eyes of the child.

    Artie
    catches his father then in a lie at least of omission—a warning to us as
    audience that he is an unreliable narrator. 
    Doing the math, Artie realizes that Anja, his mother, must have already
    been pregnant when they married. This raises the possibility that it was a
    forced marriage; his father may have been playing around, heedless of the women’s
    interests, and gotten caught.

    Those who
    give in to the sin of pride are also likely to give in to the sin of lust. As
    well as that of avarice, and so forth.

    Caught out
    on this, Vladek tried to distract by throwing shade on Artie. He accuses him of
    being premature: this looks like an ad hoc projection, not a truth. Then he
    claims the doctor had to break his arm to extract him, and that, as a child, that
    he often raised his arm in a “Heil Hitler” salute.

    This does
    not sound plausible. Does a diffuclut birth ever require the breaking of an
    arm? Does the breaking of an arm ever cause involuntary movements for months or
    years after? Narcissists when caught out can say almost anything. They can seem
    to be momentarily delusional, as M. Scott Peck has observed.

    That Vladek
    is rattled at this moment is demonstrated by his spilling all the pills he has
    been counting carefully.

    He credits
    himself with bringing Anja back from post-partum depression with his gentle and
    loving care for her in a Czechoslovakia sanitarium.

    Does this
    sound like the Vladek we can ourselves observe?

    More
    likely, seeing how he behaves with his second wife and his son, he drove Anja
    to the nervous breakdown. Then, rather than let her escape his grip, and
    possibly have pleasant experiences without him, he grabbed the opportunity to go
    with her to the posh sanitarium instead of tending to his work. As a result, by
    his own account, he never got his new factory insured; it was robbed, and they
    lost everything.

    It is surely
    actually unusual for sanitarium patients to be accompanied by “Someone they
    trust.” Few can afford such a thing; and it is surely considered bad for their
    recovery. The idea of the sanatoriums was to get away from their daily life, which
    is apparently troubling them, not to bring some of it with them.

    He tells
    about the factory being robbed, presumably, because he thinks it reflects badly
    on Anja. Look at the trouble her mental illness caused! Look at how I suffered
    because of her!

    And though
    he probably believes it himself—narcissists are expert at self-delusion– “I
    did not have time to have it insured before we left” does not sound plausible.
    Had time been the issue, he could have had his father-in-law insure it for him
    while he was away. He was simply irresponsible; too irresponsible to think of
    such things. And, as narcissists always do, he finds a scapegoat.

    There is
    much more, but this post is eating up too much time. I may continue later.

    But the predictable
    effect of having a hubristic spouse or parent is, of course, to drive the rest
    of the family, especially his designated scapegoats, into depression. In Vladek’s
    case, his first wife commits suicide, soon after his son is released from a
    psychiatric hospital.

    And, of course,
    he blames his son to all the relatives for this; while his son blames his
    mother for this. For whatever perverse psychological reason, nobody ever dares blame
    the narcissist. That feels too dangerous.

    On top of
    it all, his mother having just committed suicide, and his father blaming him,
    Artie at twenty is also expected to console his father, who makes himself again
    the centre of attention with his dramatic expressions of grief.

    The narcissist,
    when distraught, must take it out on his scapegoat. If not venting his anger on
    them, he will be venting his sorrow. It amounts to the same thing: the emotions
    of the narcissist become the family’s problem. It is up to them to do something
    about it.

    This is the
    root of all “depression” and much, perhaps most “mental illness”: victimization
    by a narcissist in the family.

    Maus lays
    it out plainly, and most people refuse to see it.

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