I assigned book one of Maus: A Survivor’s Tale to a “Writing About Literature” class, the designated writing-intensive course for our English majors.
The students discussed the abrupt ending, the use of ethnic stereotypes, and of course the comic book medium itself. One student’s “Hearing through Yiddish… Seeing in Ink…” is particularly thoughtful.
About a third of the class went on to read book two, even though it wasn’t on the syllabus; one student read the book aloud to her nine-year-old sister.
This weekend, Seton Hill is home to a conference sponsored by the National Catholic Center for Holocaust Education. I’m canceling all my classes during one day of the conference.
Similar:
Culture Desk: My Life in Pencils
Devotees of the Blackwing had been payin...
Aesthetics
How Americans Die
Fantastic data visualization.
How Ameri...
Culture
The GE Mascot That Proves They've Never Seen 'The Matrix'
On a scale of 1 to 10, this definitely r...
Aesthetics
The history of Tetris randomizers
A pleasantly detailed analysis of how th...
Cyberculture
Wander (1974) — a lost mainframe game is found!
Interesting news for historians of digit...
Current_Events
Qpid (#ST:TNG Rewatch, Season 4, Episode 20) Q and Vash and Robin Hood, Somehow
Rewatching ST:TNG Who doesn't like se...
Media


