As part of the Potsdam Agreement following World War II, 2.8 million Germans were expelled from Czechoslovakia. Disturbing details of mass executions and forced marches of Germans have become the topic of public debate in the Czech Republic. In recent years, representations of this traumatic episode in Czech history have filtered into popular culture as well. This article considers how the graphic novels Alois Nebel and Bomber, whose authors were inspired by Art Spiegelman\u27s Maus, address the controversial issue of the German expulsion
Asking Americans to play a word association game with “Germany” usually results in Nazis or the Holo...
The Return of the RAF: German Tales of Terror investigates representations of politically motivated ...
Book description: What if the Nazis had triumphed in World War II? What if Adolf Hitler had escaped ...
The genre of Graphic Novels has become increasingly popular in the last few years as a literary medi...
This study analyses the trajectory of literary representions of flight and expulsion from the 1950s ...
At a time where so few survivors remain alive and the extermination of European Jews is leaving the ...
Cultural memory and its media have a productive power in constructing historical nar- ratives. Espec...
Comics and graphic novels provide a singular way to explore and portray historical events and narrat...
Since the beginning of the 21st century, the topic of the expulsion of Germans after 1945 has receiv...
Jewish people have been facing discrimination and negative stereotyping for ages. Conflicts between ...
Maus (2003) by Art Spiegelman is a graphic novel of unfolding his father, Vladek's, World War II ord...
This book analyses the portrayals of the Holocaust in newspaper cartoons, educational pamphlets, sho...
This article examines the effect of comic conventions and the depiction of characters as anthropomor...
This article examines Art Spiegleman’s Maus (1997) in the context of Marianne Hirsch’s notion of pos...
Maus (2003) by Art Spiegelman is a graphic novel of unfolding his father, Vladek's, World War II ord...
Asking Americans to play a word association game with “Germany” usually results in Nazis or the Holo...
The Return of the RAF: German Tales of Terror investigates representations of politically motivated ...
Book description: What if the Nazis had triumphed in World War II? What if Adolf Hitler had escaped ...
The genre of Graphic Novels has become increasingly popular in the last few years as a literary medi...
This study analyses the trajectory of literary representions of flight and expulsion from the 1950s ...
At a time where so few survivors remain alive and the extermination of European Jews is leaving the ...
Cultural memory and its media have a productive power in constructing historical nar- ratives. Espec...
Comics and graphic novels provide a singular way to explore and portray historical events and narrat...
Since the beginning of the 21st century, the topic of the expulsion of Germans after 1945 has receiv...
Jewish people have been facing discrimination and negative stereotyping for ages. Conflicts between ...
Maus (2003) by Art Spiegelman is a graphic novel of unfolding his father, Vladek's, World War II ord...
This book analyses the portrayals of the Holocaust in newspaper cartoons, educational pamphlets, sho...
This article examines the effect of comic conventions and the depiction of characters as anthropomor...
This article examines Art Spiegleman’s Maus (1997) in the context of Marianne Hirsch’s notion of pos...
Maus (2003) by Art Spiegelman is a graphic novel of unfolding his father, Vladek's, World War II ord...
Asking Americans to play a word association game with “Germany” usually results in Nazis or the Holo...
The Return of the RAF: German Tales of Terror investigates representations of politically motivated ...
Book description: What if the Nazis had triumphed in World War II? What if Adolf Hitler had escaped ...