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/lit/ - Literature


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File: 166 KB, 640x360, Maus.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
9352441 No.9352441 [Reply] [Original]

What a great fucking comic book...

>> No.9352444

>>>/co/

>> No.9352457

>>9352441
>t. Jew

>> No.9352461

>>9352457
>t./pol/tard

>> No.9352555

b-but the holocaust never happened

>> No.9352573

>>9352555
>dozens of Allied servicemen who had to wade through Dachau all lied about it when they wrote their memoirs/letters home, and managed to keep the story straight

>> No.9352575

>>9352573
>jews think getting owned hard is unique in history

>> No.9353362

>>9352573
>what is typhus

>> No.9353475

Read the Berlin Trilogie next

>> No.9353489

>>9352441
>What a great fucking comic graphic novel...

there, I fixed it for you

>> No.9353519

>>9352573
>doesnt allow Historiansfags see the evidence
>ignore science & logic
>psychollogy abuse throwing it on the face this tragic event blame it an entire country
>getting money for it even if you are not a, so called, victim
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UxFEtbawPCk

>> No.9354220

What makes it so much better that it stands out from the thousands of other depictions of the Holocaust?

>> No.9354223

HeeheeheeheehahahaHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA

>> No.9354229

>>9353489
The term 'graphic novel' is such a meme

>> No.9354916

>>9354220
It depends. Which ones did you like?

>> No.9354923

>>9354220
It's not.

>>9354916
Primo Levi's

>> No.9354927

No it's not.

>> No.9354943

>>9354923
I haven't read Levi so I can't compare, but what makes Maus interesting is that it shows how the holocaust continues to affect the father and the and son in their relationship but also individually. Unlike Levi's, it's mostly a second-generation story. It's a good book.

>> No.9355172
File: 134 KB, 960x640, moorealan.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
9355172

>>9354229
>It’s a marketing term. I mean, it was one that I never had any sympathy with. The term “comic” does just as well for me. The term “graphic novel” was something that was thought up in the ’80s by marketing people and there was a guy called Bill Spicer who used to do a brilliant fanzine back in the sixties called Graphic Story Magazine. He came up with the term “graphic story”. That’s got something to recommend it, you know, I can see “graphic story” if you need it to call it something but the thing that happened in the mid-’80s was that there were a couple of things out there that you could just about call a novel. You could just about call Maus a novel, you could probably just about call Watchmen a novel, in terms of density, structure, size, scale, seriousness of theme, stuff like that. The problem is that “graphic novel” just came to mean “expensive comic book” and so what you’d get is people like DC Comics or Marvel comics – because “graphic novels” were ge
tting some attention, they’d stick six issues of whatever worthless piece of crap they happened to be publishing lately under a glossy cover and call it The She-Hulk Graphic Novel, you know? It was that that I think tended to destroy any progress that comics might have made in the mid-’80s.