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How to Decode a Political Cartoon
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How to Decode a Political Cartoon. Definitions "political": that which is concerned with public affairs or government "cartoon": a sketch or drawing that.

Dec 19, 2015

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Page 1: How to Decode a Political Cartoon. Definitions "political": that which is concerned with public affairs or government "cartoon": a sketch or drawing that.

How to Decode a Political Cartoon

Page 2: How to Decode a Political Cartoon. Definitions "political": that which is concerned with public affairs or government "cartoon": a sketch or drawing that.

Definitions• "political": that which is concerned with public affairs or

government• "cartoon": a sketch or drawing that interests or amuses

by portraying persons, things, political events or situations etc. in an exaggerated way

Page 3: How to Decode a Political Cartoon. Definitions "political": that which is concerned with public affairs or government "cartoon": a sketch or drawing that.

Definitions

• SATIRE - uses humor to lower something or someone in the reader’s or viewer’s estimation. It is not mean-spirited and its point is not to harm. It exposes human folly to make room for improvement.

Page 4: How to Decode a Political Cartoon. Definitions "political": that which is concerned with public affairs or government "cartoon": a sketch or drawing that.

What are Political Cartoons?• Political cartoons usually appear on the editorial page of

your daily newspaper. • They generally deal with events or issues currently in the

news and are, in essence, visual editorials. • Like the writer of an editorial, the cartoonist is trying to

make a point.• They are a primary source of information.

Page 5: How to Decode a Political Cartoon. Definitions "political": that which is concerned with public affairs or government "cartoon": a sketch or drawing that.

What are Political Cartoons?

• When you look at a political cartoon produced many years ago you are seeing it out of its original context.

• In order to "get it" you will likely need some background information from classroom discussion, a textbook or your own research.

• Once you have a general idea of the topic at hand you can start to decode the message the cartoonist is trying to convey.

Page 6: How to Decode a Political Cartoon. Definitions "political": that which is concerned with public affairs or government "cartoon": a sketch or drawing that.
Page 7: How to Decode a Political Cartoon. Definitions "political": that which is concerned with public affairs or government "cartoon": a sketch or drawing that.

Tools Used By Cartoonist

• Exaggeration

• Allusion

• Analogy

• Symbolism

• Caricature

• Stereotype

• Humor

• Personification

Page 8: How to Decode a Political Cartoon. Definitions "political": that which is concerned with public affairs or government "cartoon": a sketch or drawing that.

– "Ce bon Mr. Lincoln", was published in Montréal in 1865, during the American Civil War of 1861-1865.

Page 9: How to Decode a Political Cartoon. Definitions "political": that which is concerned with public affairs or government "cartoon": a sketch or drawing that.

• Caricature is the primary technique of the political cartoonist, who often exaggerates an individual's unique characteristics to make them easily recognizable.

• There is no mistaking the tall, thin, bearded figure of American president Abraham Lincoln

• Viewers at the time would have no trouble identifying the smaller, toque-wearing figure in the upper right hand corner of cartoon A as the stereotypical French Canadian Jean-Baptiste.

Page 10: How to Decode a Political Cartoon. Definitions "political": that which is concerned with public affairs or government "cartoon": a sketch or drawing that.

• Another very important technique is the use of analogy, in which one event is represented by another.

• Lincoln (sitting on the American White House) and Jean-Baptiste (sitting on the Canadian Parliament Buildings) appear to be engaged in the childhood game "king of the castle" while Canadian soldiers stand guard on a wall separating the two countries.

Page 11: How to Decode a Political Cartoon. Definitions "political": that which is concerned with public affairs or government "cartoon": a sketch or drawing that.

CARICATURE• Exaggerates one or

more features of a person or thing. It attempts to say something about the person/thing’s character, beliefs, actions or significance.

• Makes them easily recognizable.

• Made Obama’s ears large

Page 12: How to Decode a Political Cartoon. Definitions "political": that which is concerned with public affairs or government "cartoon": a sketch or drawing that.

CARICATURE• Facial expression and

body language can be used as signs to communicate ideas.

• In some cases a cartoonist may use shading to indicate the "good guys" (light) and the "bad guys" (dark).

• Jimi Hendrix

Page 13: How to Decode a Political Cartoon. Definitions "political": that which is concerned with public affairs or government "cartoon": a sketch or drawing that.
Page 14: How to Decode a Political Cartoon. Definitions "political": that which is concerned with public affairs or government "cartoon": a sketch or drawing that.

SYMBOL• Represents something else. It is a often a

material object that represents something abstract or invisible (for example, the Statue of Liberty to represent freedom;

Page 15: How to Decode a Political Cartoon. Definitions "political": that which is concerned with public affairs or government "cartoon": a sketch or drawing that.
Page 16: How to Decode a Political Cartoon. Definitions "political": that which is concerned with public affairs or government "cartoon": a sketch or drawing that.

METAPHOR• Uses an object to

note a similarity to something else.

Page 17: How to Decode a Political Cartoon. Definitions "political": that which is concerned with public affairs or government "cartoon": a sketch or drawing that.

John Bull (England) as an octopus of imperialism

Page 18: How to Decode a Political Cartoon. Definitions "political": that which is concerned with public affairs or government "cartoon": a sketch or drawing that.

IRONY• Expresses an idea through a contradiction between something’s

literal meaning and the intended meaning. For example, picturing a U.S. president with a crown on his head.

• SARCASM- is a form of irony. The element that turns irony into sarcasm is the appearance of mockery, or bitterness.

Page 19: How to Decode a Political Cartoon. Definitions "political": that which is concerned with public affairs or government "cartoon": a sketch or drawing that.
Page 20: How to Decode a Political Cartoon. Definitions "political": that which is concerned with public affairs or government "cartoon": a sketch or drawing that.

STEREOTYPES• Works by taking a real or imagined trait of an individual

to be true of the group to which the individual belongs. They express bias and can be unfair and harmful.

Page 21: How to Decode a Political Cartoon. Definitions "political": that which is concerned with public affairs or government "cartoon": a sketch or drawing that.

Analogy & Allusions

• Another very important technique is the use of analogy, in which one event is represented by another.

• An allusion is understandable only to those with prior knowledge of the reference in question (which the writer assumes to be so).

• A one-sentence or one-phrase (or image) reference to another event, character, etc. in the Bible, mythology, or current event

Page 22: How to Decode a Political Cartoon. Definitions "political": that which is concerned with public affairs or government "cartoon": a sketch or drawing that.
Page 23: How to Decode a Political Cartoon. Definitions "political": that which is concerned with public affairs or government "cartoon": a sketch or drawing that.

Three kings follow star to Barack Obama, savior of the Democrats.

Page 24: How to Decode a Political Cartoon. Definitions "political": that which is concerned with public affairs or government "cartoon": a sketch or drawing that.

Darth Harper

Page 25: How to Decode a Political Cartoon. Definitions "political": that which is concerned with public affairs or government "cartoon": a sketch or drawing that.
Page 26: How to Decode a Political Cartoon. Definitions "political": that which is concerned with public affairs or government "cartoon": a sketch or drawing that.
Page 27: How to Decode a Political Cartoon. Definitions "political": that which is concerned with public affairs or government "cartoon": a sketch or drawing that.
Page 28: How to Decode a Political Cartoon. Definitions "political": that which is concerned with public affairs or government "cartoon": a sketch or drawing that.
Page 29: How to Decode a Political Cartoon. Definitions "political": that which is concerned with public affairs or government "cartoon": a sketch or drawing that.
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Captions• Cartoonists sometimes use words (titles,

captions, name tags, balloon comments or dialogue) to help the viewer.

Page 31: How to Decode a Political Cartoon. Definitions "political": that which is concerned with public affairs or government "cartoon": a sketch or drawing that.

Biases

• When you look at a political cartoon you should consider the biases of the cartoonist. The cartoonist, after all, is trying to make a point. When and where was the cartoon published, and in what type of publication? Who is portrayed in a favourable manner and who is not?

• Cartoons can display a number of other biases as well (such as political, religious, racial or ethnic, vocational, economic or gender biases).

Page 32: How to Decode a Political Cartoon. Definitions "political": that which is concerned with public affairs or government "cartoon": a sketch or drawing that.

Decode the message by using the following method:

• Scrutinize the characters. Can you name them by drawing on your knowledge of local and world events?

• Examine the characters' attire and other visual clues. For example: facial expressions: does the character's face convey anger, fear, intrigue etc.?complexion: describe the character's facial appearance (clean-cut and shaven, scruffy etc.)body expression and appearance: describe the character's physical appearance (slouched, arms waving frantically, small stature, broad and bold body etc.)attire: what is the character wearing? (suit and tie, underwear, hats etc.)exaggeration of facial or physical characteristics: compared to a photograph (e.g., chins, mouths, bulging eyes, long noses etc.)

• Identify objects you see in the cartoon (buildings, fences, something the character is holding). Notice words on the objects and background features (sky, walls, water).

• Discuss the main ideas expressed in the cartoon's text. Is there a common theme?

Page 33: How to Decode a Political Cartoon. Definitions "political": that which is concerned with public affairs or government "cartoon": a sketch or drawing that.

Once you have looked critically at a cartoon you can try to interpret it.

In summary, when you look at a political cartoon you should take the following steps:

• seek out the necessary background knowledge• determine the issue being considered • study the devices the cartoonist has used• identify any possible biases and try to interpret the

cartoon. • In short, what is the cartoon about, what techniques

does the cartoonist use, and what does it all mean?• Once you have looked critically at a cartoon you can try

to interpret it.

Page 34: How to Decode a Political Cartoon. Definitions "political": that which is concerned with public affairs or government "cartoon": a sketch or drawing that.
Page 35: How to Decode a Political Cartoon. Definitions "political": that which is concerned with public affairs or government "cartoon": a sketch or drawing that.
Page 36: How to Decode a Political Cartoon. Definitions "political": that which is concerned with public affairs or government "cartoon": a sketch or drawing that.
Page 37: How to Decode a Political Cartoon. Definitions "political": that which is concerned with public affairs or government "cartoon": a sketch or drawing that.
Page 38: How to Decode a Political Cartoon. Definitions "political": that which is concerned with public affairs or government "cartoon": a sketch or drawing that.
Page 39: How to Decode a Political Cartoon. Definitions "political": that which is concerned with public affairs or government "cartoon": a sketch or drawing that.
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The Rebellions of 1837Political Cartoons

Instructions: Create a political cartoon on the Rebellions of 1837 You must invent an appropriate slogan and have captions. You must use at least TWO devices in your cartoon: Exaggeration,

Allusion, Analogy, Symbolism, Metaphor, Caricature, Stereotype, Humor (satire), Personification

Your cartoon must include at least ONE Historical Figure (or reference to) from the Rebellions of 1837.

You need to illustrate your cartoon with fully coloured, hand-drawn pictures.

On the back, explain the background of your cartoon, and all devices that you used to create the cartoon.

Checklist for Creating Cartoons :– Decide what aspect of the Rebellions of 1837 that you wish to convey

your message with. Give reasons for your decision.– Identify your topic: Event, person etc..– Express your point of view and the message you want to convey– Determine what symbols are appropriate and historically accurate– Choose the words to convey your message.