Political Cartoons - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Political Cartoons

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Title: Slide 1 Author: ASU CLAS Last modified by: Don Nilsen Created Date: 12/19/2005 6:16:33 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show (4:3) Company – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Political Cartoons


1
Political Cartoons
  • by Alleen Pace Nilsen
  • and Don L. F. Nilsen

2
Caricatures
  • Caricatures are probably the oldest form of
    pictorial humor, where caricare in Latin means
    to overload, or exaggerate.
  • The main stylistic devices here are distortion
    and exaggeration, and the main subject, famous
    people.

3
The Word Cartoon
  • The term Cartoon originally comes from the
    Italian word cartone and means a strong, heavy
    paper or pasteboard. It denotes a full-size
    drawing made on paper as a study for further
    drawings, such as a painting or tapestry.
  • Punch applied the term to satirical drawings by
    publishing some parody drafts for frescoes (also
    called cartoons) and making the terms new
    meaning permanent.

4
  • A cartoonists craft may force them to limit
    their originality, because they have fewer than
    10 seconds to grab the attention of viewers, and,
    in fact, to tell whole stories.
  • We will start with two classic cartoons by David
    Levine for the New York Review of Books. No
    words are needed, but readers had to have
    cultural knowledge in order to Catch on.

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  • After President Lyndon Johnson had gallbladder
    surgery he lifted his shirt to show his scar to
    reporters at a news conference. Levines drawing
    shows that his real scar was in the shape of
    Vietnam.
  • President Reagan, who was famous for cutting
    welfare is compared to Marie Antoinette who after
    being told that the people had no bread famously
    said, Let them eat cake.

7
  • Cultural Icons can be either
  • recognized visual symbols
  • or familiar words that can be parodied.
  • Cartoonists first have to help the viewers into
    the mindset of the original,
  • Then take them in a new direction.

8
  • As with Mike Peterss 1984 criticism of President
    Reagans military support of El Salvador
  • I pledge a billion to the flag
  • of the right wing government of El Salvador
  • And to the death squads for which it stands
  • One nation, underfed
  • Indefensible
  • With M-16s and Howitzers for all.

9
These words have come into English from various
cartoons POW! ZAP! WHAM! ZIP! ZOWIE! Teddy
Bear Gerrymander Yellow Journalism McCarthyism
(from Senator Simple J. Malarkey in the Pogo
Comic Strip)
10
ARACHNOPHOBIA ? IRAQNAPHOBIA
  • The term Iraqnaphobia was first used in the
    caption of an editorial cartoon by Clay Bennett
    that appeared in the August 3, 1990 edition of
    the St. Petersburg Times.
  • The cartoon shows a spider labeled Iraq
    menacing Kuwait, and the caption reads Saddam
    Hussein Presents Iraqnophobia.

11
Obituary Cartoons
  • Cartoonists hate doing them, because they have to
    be respectful, no matter what.
  • But their audiences love them, because they
    capture the essence of the person who has died.

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  • For efficiency, cartoonists make use of common
    visual symbols
  • Pointing fingers or arrows
  • The Trojan Horse
  • Tombstones and the initials R.I.P.
  • Skulls/The Grim Reaper

15
  • The three monkeys
  • The Ghost of Christmas Past
  • Superman
  • Railroad tracks not matching up
  • A 1973 Boston Globe Cartoon by Paul Szep showed
    Vietnam as a maze.
  • Reprinted in 1975 with added symbolism.

16
Other Common Symbols include
  • Snakes
  • Wolves
  • Fantasy characters
  • Baby buggies (because they hide information)
  • And new interpretations of familiar sayings about
    big sticks (which a person should carry as he
    speaks softly), and where the buck stops.

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  • Variations on the Statue of Liberty show how
    symbols can change over time while still
    retaining some of the original meaning.

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  • Statue of Liberty cartoons while making many
    different political points still rely on images
    that in most peoples minds are feminine.

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  • 1960 Doug MacPherson drew Fidel Castro and
    Nikita Krushev having a picnic on her head.
  • 1971 Daniel Aguila drew her with shortened
    robes under the cutline Lib and let lib!
  • 1980 Doug Marlett showed her sweeping dirt under
    a rug designed as a flag.

25
  • 1984 Signe Wilkinson showed her going through a
    sewing factory shouting OK, you huddled masses,
    I know youre in here!
  • 2001 After 9/11, a tear falling from one eye
  • And two sad eyes reflecting the burning Twin
    Towers

26
  • 2003 Expressing womanly impatience as she says
    Geez, two years and still no capture of Osameor
    Saddamor Al Qaidaor WMDor the Taliban, or
    Justice or A side note read In a city
    accustomed to the New York Minute.
  • 2005 Nick Adams won the 2005 Pulitzer Prize for
    showing President Bush sitting on top of her
    crown wearing earphones hooked to a satellite
    dish, which had replaced the flame in her
    extended arm.

27
A Recent New Yorker Cover
  • What is the intended meaning of this cartoon?
  • Does it mean different things to different
    people?
  • Is The New Yorker more conservative or more
    liberal in its leanings?
  • What about the cartoon?

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29
  • Coffins have a similar impact. At first the Bush
    administration forbade photographs, but the
    drawings were even more heart-rending because
    cartoonists added their own touches.
  • Walt Handelsman drew coffins each covered with a
    funeral bouquet His cutline Theyll be Greeted
    with Flowers.
  • Another cartoonist stood coffins on end as an
    eerie reminder of the domino theory that guided
    American policies in Vietnam.

30
  • The Abu Ghraib prison scandal again shows shape
    as a hidden persuader.
  • The most heart-wrenching photos were of Private
    Lynddie England holding a naked man on a dog
    leash, a pyramid of naked Iraquis, and a hooded
    prisoner silhouetted in a ragged, black blanket.
  • Out of 40 Abu Ghraib cartoons reprinted in Best
    of the Year collections, more than half featured
    this man on the box.

31
!
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  • It was the most dramatic of the images.
  • The simplicity of design made it easy to
    highlight.
  • It inspired viewers to pull related images from
    their own minds as in comparing it to the Ku Klux
    Klan.

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36
In 2010, Wheres the Humor?
  • People are so frustrated with each other that
    really funny cartoons are hard to find.
  • Todays cartoons are mostly hostile and
    accusatory.
  • They illustrate the idea of the MICH
    theoryModerate Intergroup Conflict Humorwhich
    says that people have to be a little bothered by
    something to expend the energy to make a joke.
    But if people are so bothered that they are
    really angry, they want to express their
    hostility in something more powerful than a joke.

37
The Biggest Surprise in the 2010 National
Election is the ToughTalk between Male/Female
Candidates
  • Polite sensitivities have been shelved, while
    bold gender-based power plays have become the
    norm.
  • Linguist Deborah Tannen relates the change to
    lines blurring between public and private.
  • Communications Professor Kathleen Jamieson says
    that tough language frames the attacker as
    tougher than the person attacked.

38
Joking is now coming through sexist insults
that are repeated by the late-night comedians.
  • In August, Sarah Palin told Fox News that
    President Obama did not have the cojones to get
    tough on illegal immigration.
  • In an October debate between Nevada Senate
    candidates, Sharron Angle zinged Harry Reid with
    Man up, Harry Reid.
  • Although Angles zinger got the most publicity,
    the phrase had already been used by Missouri
    Democrat Robin Carnahan in a Senate debate with
    Rep. Roy Blount.
  • In September, Delaware Senate candidate Christine
    ODonnell told a radio interviewer that her
    primary opponent should put his man pants on

39
  • Linguist George Lakoff explained that the
    Republican worldview emphasizes masculinity and
    strength,while Democrats underscore the more
    feminine quality of empathy.
  • This is why, If youre a woman candidate whos a
    conservative, then you have to say youre more
    masculine than the other guy.
  • However, theres a double standard in this bold,
    new talk because it doesnt go over well for a
    man to tell a female candidate to be more
    ladylike.
  • Colorado Republican Senate candidate Ken Buck
    faced repercussions when he said that unlike his
    primary opponent Jane Norton, I do not wear high
    heels.
  • In California, Governor candidate Jerry Brown
    apologized to Republican Meg Whitman after an
    aide was recorded calling her a whore.

40
New Yorker Cartoonists Therapy Session
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?vWdts_HG7e2Y

41
The Pulitzer Prize in Editorial Cartooning
  • Here are some web sites of Pulitzer Prize winners
    in the category of Editorial Cartooning.
  • No web sites could be found for some of the
    Pulitzer Prize winners.

42
  • 1974 and 1977 PULITZER PRIZE PAUL SZEP
  • http//www.szep.com/szep_thisweek.htm
  • 1976 PULITZER PRIZE TONY AUTH
  • http//www.gocomics.com/tonyauth/
  • 1978 PULITZER PRIZE JEFF MACNELLY
  • http//www.macnelly.com/
  • 1979 PULITZER PRIZE HERBERB BLOCK
  • http//www.loc.gov/rr/print/swann/herblock/
  • 1981 PULITZER PRIZE MIKE PETERS
  • http//www.grimmy.com/editorials.php
  • 1985 PULITZER PRIZE JEFF MACNELLY
  • http//www.macnelly.com/

43
  • 1987 PULITZER PRIZE BERKELEY BREATHED
  • http//www.berkeleybreathed.com/pages/index.asp
  • 1992 PULITZER PRIZE SIGNE WILKINSON
  • Http//www.philly.com/mld/dailynews/news/special_p
    ackags/signe/
  • 1993 PULITZER PRIZE STEVE BENSON
  • http//www.azcentral.com/arizonarepublic/opinions/
    benson/
  • 1995 and 2006 PULITZER PRIZE MIKE LUCKOVICH
  • http//www.ajc.com/opinion/content/opinion/luckovi
    ch/index.html
  • 1999 and 2003 PULITZER PRIZE DAVID HORSEY
  • http//seattlepi.nwsource.com/horsey/
  • 2001 PULITZER PRIZE ANN TELNAES
  • www.anntelnaes.com

44
  • 2002 PULITZER PRIZE CLAY BENNETT
  • www.claybennett.com
  • 2005 PULITZER PRIZE NICK ANDERSON
  • http//www.cartoonistgroup.com/properties/anderson
    /home.php
  • 2009 PULITZER PRIZE STEVE BREEN
  • http//townhall.com/political-cartoons/stevebreen/
  • 2010 PULITZER PRIZE MARK FIORE
  • http//www.markfiore.com/
  • 2011 PULITZER PRIZE MIKE KEEFE
  • http//www.denverpost.com/keefe
  • 2012 PULITZER PRIZE MATT WUERKER
  • http//www.politico.com/wuerker/

45
  • 2013 PULITZER PRIZE STEVE SACK
  • http//www.startribune.com/steve-sack/10645851/
  • 2014 PULITZER PRIZE KEVIN SIERS
  • http//www.charlotteobserver.com/opinion/editorial
    -cartoons/kevin-siers/
  • 2015 PULITZER PRIZE ADAM ZYGLIS
  • http//www.adamzyglis.com/
  • 2016 PULITZER PRIZE ?
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