Tara Forstner

November 29, 2011

English 112B

Dr. Warner

Unit of Study:

Using Graphic Novels as Complements to the Classics

Why teach with graphic novels?

It is a researched fact that 40% of teenagers today are alliterate. That is a very alarming statistic and something needs to be done to change it. Reading can be considered an acquired taste; you have to keep trying different books until you find one that you like. However, young adults would rather watch the movie version of a book online than read. This is the technology era and books do not stand a chance. Or do they? An emerging genre of literature known as the graphic novel is taking reading to a whole new level. Comic books have always been a staple in American society for generations but rarely have they been considered educational. Graphic novels are changing this perspective in that they are taking the usual topics and creating them in an artistic manner that is more engaging to teenagers. This is especially good news for teachers because many of the classic novels that are taught in school today have now been turned into graphic novels. Using these novels can also be beneficial to English-Language students as they can provide a different medium for teaching language. In his article, Critical Literacies and Graphic Novels for English-Language Learners: Teaching Maus, Christian W. Chun states, �Graphic novels like Maus, Barefoot Gen, and Persepolis, about seminal events in the not-so-distant past, can mediate these historical realities with their unique visual narrative styles that allow many readers, especially adolescent ones, to imagine and interpret characters� experiences that are far removed from their daily lives.�  By seeing visuals of the text, they can better interpret what is going on in the novel and can make the connection between picture and word.

           For my unit of study, I have chosen to focus on Night by Elie Wiesel, which is generally taught to high school sophomores, and complement it with the graphic novel Maus: A survivor�s Tale II and Here my Troubles Began by Art Spiegelman. The Holocaust is a horrific event in history that most students are very removed from because it happened more than sixty years ago and also because it was incident which is very unbelievable. The manner in which the Nazis exterminated the Jewish people seems like something out of Hollywood and nobody wants to believe that it actually happened. Night can be a difficult novel to teach because of the content and I believe that teaching a graphic novel alongside it will help the students visualize and connect with what went on in the concentration camps. What makes Maus II so engaging is the use of animals instead of people and the integration of the present with the past. Art is interviewing his father Vladek about his time in the Auschwitz concentration camp. Art wrote the novel after his father�s death and is recalling the days he spent with him in order to record his story. I chose Maus II because it focuses more on Vladek�s year in Auschwitz, just as Night does. Both novels have themes of family, religion and war that are key elements to understanding how these men survived this historical event.

 

Launching the Unit

Night

I would begin the unit by first introducing Night. Before reading the novel I would use the following activities to introduce the students to the Holocaust.

1)    Have the students do a quick write about discrimination using the following prompt: Have you ever been discriminated against because of your religion, race, gender, or sexual orientation? If yes, when? How did you handle it? Have you ever witnessed acts of discrimination against others? When? What happened? Discussion of their answers will follow.

2)    The next activity will be for them to read the poem The Butterfly by Pavel Freidman, a teenager living in the Theresienstadt Ghetto.

The last, the very last,
So richly, brightly, dazzlingly yellow.
Perhaps if the sun's tears would sing
against a white stone. . . .

Such, such a yellow
Is carried lightly 'way up high.
It went away I'm sure because it wished to
kiss the world good-bye.

For seven weeks I've lived in here,
Penned up inside this ghetto.
But I have found what I love here.
The dandelions call to me
And the white chestnut branches in the court.
Only I never saw another butterfly.

That butterfly was the last one.
Butterflies don't live in here,
in the ghetto.

 

Following the reading, the students will discuss the tone of the poem- is it happy or sad? Optimistic or pessimistic? What images stand out? What do you think the butterfly symbolizes?

3)    I will then show a clip from the movie Schindler�s List. It is a clip of the Jewish people being forced out of their ghetto and rounded up for transport by the Nazis while a young girl in a red coat is wandering amidst all of the chaos. It can be found on YouTube at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j1VL-y9JHuI&feature=relmfu. After, I will discuss the clip and ask what the students know about the Holocaust.

Maus II

To introduce the graphic novel, I would have the students do a quick write on the following questions:

1)    What do you know about graphic novels?  Have you ever read one? If yes, which one/s? If given the choice, would you rather read a book or a graphic novel? If you have not read one, what do you think a graphic novel is?

2)    I would then show two movie clips:

a)    A clip from the movie Scott Pilgrim vs. the World, which is adapted from a graphic novel. I will have the students pay close attention to visual elements that the movie uses.

b)    I would then show a clip of the movie Watchmen, which is also adapted from a graphic novel.      

c)     An explanation about graphic novels will follow the clips with a discussion about what the students wrote for their quick write.

The Main Texts

Reading two texts at once is going to require a lot of time management. I would read Night in class and then assign Maus II as homework. The following assignments will be used:

1)    While reading Maus II the students will keep a dialectical journal. They will choose a scene which stands out to them or is confusing to them. They will summarize the scene and explain why they chose it. They will also write down any words that they do not understand and we will go over them in class. Each day we will compile a vocabulary list from these words.

2)    In class, the students will be put into groups to discuss the similarities and differences between the two novels. Which one is easier for them to understand? Which one do they like better? 

3)    The students will be assigned a chapter from Maus II and they will then choose a scene to act out that is important to both novels. Each group will explain why they chose that scene and how it relates back to Night.

4)    Discuss the familial relationships in both novels between Eliezer and his father and between Vladek and Anja. Which relationship is more powerful to them? The written one or the graphic one?  Are they both equally powerful?  Why?

5)     In groups, have the students discuss why Art Spielgelman decided to use cats and mice to depict the Germans and the Jews in his story. Does this help the students understand the story better? Why or why not? Which animals would they use if they were to tell the story?  After, have a class discussion about their answers.

6)    In groups, the students will compare and contrast the experiences of the main characters of each of the novels. While the characters in each of the novels are sent to the same camp, there are differences in their experiences.They will be responsible for answering the following questions: Do Eliezer or Vladek gain special privileges while in Auschwitz? If so how and why? Do you think age plays a role in who will survive in the camps?

7)    As a final project, have the students assume the role of either Eliezer or Art and write a letter to a loved one in graphic novel form. Emphasize the importance of word selection and sound effects as well as the emotions of their characters in art form.

8)    To end the unit, I will show a documentary about the Holocaust such as Auschwitz: Inside the Nazi State, a 2005 production by the BBC about the latest details on one of the most horrific concentration camps during the war. 

 

Extending the Unit

        There are a small group of graphic novels about the Holocaust that the students can read on their own if they choose to pursue more information. There are also regular novels about this topic that may also spark their interest.  All of these novels can also be used as an extra complement to the main texts.

Graphic Novels

Anne Frank: A Graphic Biography by Sid Jacobson. Illustrated by Ernie Col�n.

     This graphic novel, approved by the Anne Frank House, tells the story of Anne and her family from her parent�s life before the girls to the family�s days in hiding to their capture and their lives in the concentration camps. The story ends with Otto Frank�s return to Amsterdam, the publishing of Anne�s diary and the opening of the Anne Frank House Museum. (http://www.annefrank.org/en/Worldwide/Education/Graphic-Biography/) This graphic biography brings Anne Diary to life in a new and exciting way for students. It can be taught alongside her diary.

The Search. Illustrated by Eric Heuvel and written by Eric Heuvel, Ruud van der Rol and Lies Schippers

      In this graphic novel, the readers follow Esther, a young Jewish girl as she fights to stay alive during the Holocaust. Separated from her parents, Esther goes into hiding and learns at the end of the war that her parents have been killed. Years later, Esther begins a search to learn the truth about her parent�s fate, all with the help of her grandson (http://www.annefrank.org/en/Worldwide/Education/The-Search/).

   Family Secret. Illustrated by Eric Heuvel and written by Eric Heuvel, Menno Metselaar, Rudd van der Rol, and Hans Groenweg

     Jerone is searching through his Grandmother Helena�s attic for things to sell in a yard sale when he stumbles upon an old scrapbook from the Second World War. When he questions his grandmother about the war, he learns his family has secret they have been keeping about their lives during this time (http://www.annefrank.org/en/Worldwide/Education/A-Family-Secret/).     

I Was a child of a Holocaust Survivor by Bernice Eisenstein

Growing up, Bernice Eisenstein always felt she was living her life in the shadows of the Holocaust. While she was born after the Second World War, her parent�s lives were still deeply rooted in the past. Through this graphically enriched novel, Einstein tells the story of her life as a child of holocaust survivors (http://www.randomhouse.com/book/45649/i-was-a-child-of-holocaust-survivors-by-bernice-eisenstein).

Auschwitz by Pascal Croci.

      Illustrated in gripping black and white photos, this novel tells the story of fictional couple Kazik and Cessnia as they struggle to stay alive in a camp that claimed the life of their daughter. Based on actual interviews with survivors, this story depicts the horror and brutality of the Holocaust with immediacy and disturbing reality (http://www.powells.com/biblio/2-9780810948310-4).  

Resistance I by Carla Jablonski and illustrated by Leland Purvis.

     Paul Tessler lives in a small French village during World War I and his father has been taken as a prisoner of war by the German Army. With his father away, Paul is now the man of the house and must keep things in order. Paul�s life becomes more complicated than ever when he decides to hide his Jewish friend Henri Levy, whose parents have vanished. Paul and his sister Marie keep Henri hidden but somehow their secret is leaked out to the Resistance. Paul, Marie and Henri must now take on the roles of the youngest members of the Resistance (http://hclib.org/teens/booklistaction.cfm?list_num=404).

Novels

Number the Stars by Lois Lowry

     Annemarie Johansen and her best friend Ellen Rosen can�t help but to think of their lives before the war. Now it is 1943 and their life in Copenhagen consist of school, food shortages, and Nazi soldiers on the street corners. The Nazis are showing no signs of backing down and now the Jews of Denmark are being �relocated�. Annemarie�s family has agreed to take Ellen in as their and pass her off as their daughter. Annemarie is asked to go on a dangerous mission that will test her strength and courage in order to save her friend�s life (Lowry).

Briar Rose by Jane Yolen

     Rebecca, Shanna, and Sylvia are now all young adults, but each remembers their grandmother telling and retelling the �Sleeping Beauty� fairy tale. Their grandmother�s stories always held some harsh and strange images that were not part of the original tale. Following her death, Rebecca is left with her �Gemmas�s� parting words: �I am Briar Rose.� Rebecca�s search to find the real identity of her grandmother leads to another chapter in the horrendous story of the Holocaust (Warner).

The Boy in the Striped Pajamas by John Boyne  

     The son of a Nazi officer befriends a boy in striped pajamas who lives behind a wire fence in the strange place called Out-With  in 1942 (http://hclib.org/teens/booklistaction.cfm?list_num=404).  

 

Websites which the students can access for further information about the Holocaust.

www.annefrank.org

http://www1.yadvashem.org/yv/en/holocaust/index.asp?WT.mc_id=ggcamp&WT.srch=1


 

Works Cited

Auschwitz:Inside the Nazi State. Dir. Laurence Rees. 2005.

Boyne, John. The Boy in the Striped Pajamas: A Fable. New York: David Ficklin Books, 2006.

Chun, Christain W. "Critical Literacies and Graphis Novels for English-Language Learners: Teaching Maus." Journal of Adolescent and Adult Literacy (2009): 144-153.

Corci, Pascal. Auschwitz. New York: Harry N. Abrams, 2004.

Eisenstein, Bernice. I Was a Child of Holocaust Survivors. New York: The Penguin Group, 2007.

Freidman, Pavel. "The International School for Holocaust Studies." Yad Vashem. 23 November 2011 <http://www1.yadvashem.org/yv/en/education/lesson_plans/poems_paintings.asp>.

Jablonski, Carla. Resistance I. New York: First Second, 2010.

Lowry, Lois. Number the Stars. New York: Yearling, 1989.

Scott Pilgrim vs. the World. Dir. Edgar Wright. Perf. Michael Cerra, Mary Elisabeth Winstead and Kieran Culkin. 2010.

Spiegelman, Art. Maus A Survior's Tale II And Here My Troubles Began. New York: Pantheon Books, 1986.

Warner, Mary L. Adolescents in the Search for Meaning: Tapping the Powerful Resource of Story. Lanham: The Rowman & Littlefield Publishing Group, Inc., 2006.

Watchmen. Dir. Zack Snyder. Perf. Jackie Earl Haley, Patrick Wilson and Carla Gugino. 2009.

Wiesel, Elie. Night. New York: Hill and Wang, 1958.

Yolen, Jane. Briar Rose. New York: Tom Doherty Associates, LLC, 1992.