Art Spiegelman’s Maus (1986–1991) occupies a distinctive place in Holocaust literature through its sustained use of anthropomorphic animals to represent national and ethnic groups. Rather than presenting events in a conventionally realist mode, the work draws Jewish characters as mice, Germans as cats, Poles as pigs and Americans as dogs. This essay examines how the animal imagery initially appears to rely on familiar predator-prey stereotypes yet progressively complicates them. It further considers the implications of these representations for questions of identity and postmemory, focusing on Spiegelman’s position as the child of survivors who must negotiate a story he has inherited rather than experienced directly. The discussion draws on the primary text and selected scholarly commentary to argue that Maus simultaneously employs and unsettles visual stereotypes while foregrounding the ethical difficulties of second-generation testimony.
The Development of Animal Imagery Beyond Simple Metaphor
At the outset, the cat-and-mouse conceit seems straightforward: Nazi persecution is rendered as a literal hunt. Vladek’s experiences in occupied Poland are depicted through chases, hiding places and betrayals that mirror the traditional dynamics of cats pursuing mice. However, the consistency of this scheme soon breaks down. Characters occasionally wear masks or adopt the appearance of another species, most notably when Vladek and Anja attempt to pass as Poles and are drawn with pig masks over mouse faces. These moments reveal that identity is not fixed by biology but performed under duress, thereby undermining any claim that the animal categories represent immutable essences (Spiegelman, 1991).
The scheme is further destabilised by mixed relationships and the presence of real animals. When Vladek marries Anja, whose family background is wealthier and more assimilated, the visual contrast between their respective mouse features hints at internal Jewish differences that the overarching metaphor cannot fully contain. Later, in the United States, the appearance of a real mouse in Art’s studio interrupts the allegory, reminding the reader that the animal code is an artistic device rather than a natural order. Such interruptions encourage a critical stance toward the stereotypes the images initially invoke, demonstrating that visual shorthand can both clarify and obscure historical complexity.
Stereotypes, Otherness and the Limits of Representation
The animal imagery raises persistent questions about how groups are seen by others and by themselves. By casting Jews as mice, Spiegelman deliberately invokes Nazi propaganda that portrayed Jews as vermin; yet the narrative refuses to let this equation stand unchallenged. The Polish pigs, for example, are neither wholly villainous nor wholly virtuous; some risk their lives to hide Jews while others exploit them. This differentiation resists reducing any national group to a single trait. Academic discussion has noted that the choice of pigs for Poles draws on longstanding cultural associations in both Polish and Jewish traditions, thereby acknowledging the historical tensions between the two communities without endorsing a reductive view (Rothberg, 1994).
Furthermore, the imagery exposes the artificiality of racial categories. When Art himself is shown wearing a mouse mask while interviewing his father, the reader is reminded that the cartoonist’s Jewish identity is partly constructed through the very act of drawing. The mask therefore functions as a visual metaphor for postmemory, the process by which children of survivors adopt and reconfigure traumatic narratives they did not live through. In this sense the animal allegory does not essentialise identity but illustrates its contingent, relational nature.
Art Spiegelman’s Position as Second-Generation Witness
Maus is equally concerned with the transmission of memory across generations. Because Art was born after the war, his access to events depends on Vladek’s testimony and on archival material. This mediated relationship generates a form of survivor guilt distinct from that experienced by direct victims. Art repeatedly expresses anxiety that his own difficulties, including a period of psychiatric hospitalisation, are trivial compared with his parents’ suffering. The graphic novel records these doubts explicitly in the meta-comic “Prisoner on the Hell Planet,” which interrupts the animal narrative to show human figures and thereby marks the boundary between lived experience and inherited memory (Spiegelman, 1991).
The act of drawing therefore becomes a means both of approaching and of distancing the Holocaust. Art’s interviews with Vladek are punctuated by arguments over the accuracy of the account and by Vladek’s own selective omissions. These tensions illustrate the problem-solving dimension of second-generation writing: the need to balance fidelity to a parental narrative with recognition of its inevitable gaps and biases. The resulting text is consequently as much about the difficulties of listening and representing as it is about the events themselves.
Conclusion
Spiegelman’s animal imagery in Maus begins with a recognisable predator-prey structure yet continually exceeds and questions that structure through masks, inconsistencies and self-reflexive interruptions. In doing so the work challenges the stereotypes it initially appears to reproduce and foregrounds the constructed character of identity. At the same time, the narrative foregrounds the ethical and emotional negotiations required of a child of survivors who must find a place within a history he has received second-hand. The result is a text that remains a significant example of how visual and verbal strategies can address the complexities of Holocaust memory without presuming direct access to events.
References
- Rothberg, M. (1994) ‘We Were Talking Jewish’: Art Spiegelman’s ‘Maus’ as Heteroglossic Text. Contemporary Literature, 35(4), pp. 661-681.
- Spiegelman, A. (1991) Maus: A Survivor’s Tale. New York: Pantheon Books.

