The Holocaust is often regarded as one of history's darkest periods. Yet, a new wave of Jewish diaspora stories has emerged, employing humour to tell tales of survival and tragedy. A group of graphic memoirs are tackling this subject with fresh perspectives - an ironic twist given the sombre nature of their topic.
Among these recent works is "The Crystal Vase", based on the life story of Gisela, a German-Jewish grandmother who survived the Holocaust. Her story is interwoven with anecdotes about her family's eccentricities and how they influenced my own upbringing.
Gisela was not an affable person; she reveled in the misfortunes of others and enjoyed laughing at her jokes. If an event combined opportunities for all three activities, so much the better. When I refused to eat meatloaf at a young age, Gisela retaliated by serving it to me repeatedly until I finally gave in.
As research into my grandmother's story progressed, I discovered these humorous anecdotes slipped between the heavy facts of Holocaust history. The recollections were found in graphic memoirs about her life - each generation relates to their family history differently and this trend was reflected in how I approached my own grandmother's story.
A recent interview by Jesse Eisenberg stated that "First generation builds the house. Second generation lives in the house. Third generation burns it down." According to Eisenberg, a movie can simultaneously have great reverence for the history while also creating an irreverent and sometimes transgressive tone, because that is the full and honest way I experience history.
The tension between reverence and irreverence was apparent in recent films about grief tourism - movies that tackle serious Jewish history through family comedy. A Real Pain director Jesse Eisenberg stars in the film alongside Kieran Culkin, where a group of friends on a tour of Warsaw struggle to reconcile the city's past with their own reality.
Another "grief tourism" tragicomedy, Treasure features an Auschwitz-survivor father and his prickly daughter as they travel to Poland. The father is exuberant but also quite dry about his experiences in concentration camps - even when his family heirlooms are sold back to him.
In my journey to preserve my grandmother's story, I went on a fraught road trip with my father across Europe to distribute her belongings after she passed away. While this was not the way she would have wanted me to tell our family history, humour and solemnity coexisted in the end as I found both helpful when dealing with the complex stories of survivors.
In contrast, Art Spiegelman's Pulitzer prize-winning Maus initially faced condemnation in Israel due to its use of comics. The book is a poignant portrayal of his complicated relationship with an Auschwitz-survivor father.
The "third generation" are taking ownership of our family histories and making space for the humour of human foibles, even in darkest stories.
It remains to be seen how my son will tell his own story - perhaps one day he'll write about the time I served him that disgusting meatloaf.
Among these recent works is "The Crystal Vase", based on the life story of Gisela, a German-Jewish grandmother who survived the Holocaust. Her story is interwoven with anecdotes about her family's eccentricities and how they influenced my own upbringing.
Gisela was not an affable person; she reveled in the misfortunes of others and enjoyed laughing at her jokes. If an event combined opportunities for all three activities, so much the better. When I refused to eat meatloaf at a young age, Gisela retaliated by serving it to me repeatedly until I finally gave in.
As research into my grandmother's story progressed, I discovered these humorous anecdotes slipped between the heavy facts of Holocaust history. The recollections were found in graphic memoirs about her life - each generation relates to their family history differently and this trend was reflected in how I approached my own grandmother's story.
A recent interview by Jesse Eisenberg stated that "First generation builds the house. Second generation lives in the house. Third generation burns it down." According to Eisenberg, a movie can simultaneously have great reverence for the history while also creating an irreverent and sometimes transgressive tone, because that is the full and honest way I experience history.
The tension between reverence and irreverence was apparent in recent films about grief tourism - movies that tackle serious Jewish history through family comedy. A Real Pain director Jesse Eisenberg stars in the film alongside Kieran Culkin, where a group of friends on a tour of Warsaw struggle to reconcile the city's past with their own reality.
Another "grief tourism" tragicomedy, Treasure features an Auschwitz-survivor father and his prickly daughter as they travel to Poland. The father is exuberant but also quite dry about his experiences in concentration camps - even when his family heirlooms are sold back to him.
In my journey to preserve my grandmother's story, I went on a fraught road trip with my father across Europe to distribute her belongings after she passed away. While this was not the way she would have wanted me to tell our family history, humour and solemnity coexisted in the end as I found both helpful when dealing with the complex stories of survivors.
In contrast, Art Spiegelman's Pulitzer prize-winning Maus initially faced condemnation in Israel due to its use of comics. The book is a poignant portrayal of his complicated relationship with an Auschwitz-survivor father.
The "third generation" are taking ownership of our family histories and making space for the humour of human foibles, even in darkest stories.
It remains to be seen how my son will tell his own story - perhaps one day he'll write about the time I served him that disgusting meatloaf.