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Analyzing Editorial Cartoons: Democrats Need Dirksen
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ID: 1966/bx/4/11
Date: 1966
Larger Image: 66.93KB
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Lesson
Plan Objectives
As students analyze the editorial cartoon, they will
- Understand the context in which the cartoon was drawn
- Discover
the basic elements of the cartoon
- Find and interpret the icons that
appear in the cartoon
- Identify the cartoonist’s message
- Develop skill in seeing
and understanding persuasive techniques used by cartoonists
- Identify
qualities of cartooning such as sensory, formal, expressive, technical,
and judgmental
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“A cartoon does not tell everything about a subject. It's
not supposed to. No written piece tells everything either. As far
as words are concerned, there is no safety in numbers. The test
of a written or drawn commentary is whether it gets at an essential
truth.”
“The Cartoon by Herb Block” posted at http://www.loc.gov/rr/print/swann/herblock/cartoon.html |
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“Cartooning is an irreverent form of expression,
and one particularly suited to scoffing at the high and the mighty.
If the prime role of a free press is to serve as critic of government,
cartooning is often the cutting edge of that criticism.”
“The Cartoon by Herb Block” posted at http://www.loc.gov/rr/print/swann/
herblock/cartoon.html
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Historical Context for the Cartoon
Throughout his career, illness and injury plagued Senate Minority Leader Everett Dirksen. In 1966, Dirksen turned 70. He became such a regular patient at Walter Reed Army Hospital in Washington that finally, for a time in the mid-1960s, he simply checked himself into the hospital and lived there, driving to the Senate in the morning and returning to the hospital each night. In May, he fell out of bed, fracturing this right thigh bone.
It was a mark of Dirksen’s importance that the president would visit the bedridden Dirksen. |
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Analyzing
the Cartoon
What follows are guidelines for analyzing or interpreting a cartoon.
Not all of them will apply to every cartoon, of course.
Visual Elements
- List the objects or people you see in the cartoon. Sometimes cartoonists
overdraw, or exaggerate, the physical characteristics of people or
things in order to make a point. When you study a cartoon, look for
any characteristics that seem overdone or overblown (facial characteristics
and clothing are some of the most commonly exaggerated characteristics.)
Then, try to decide what point the cartoonist was trying to make
through exaggeration.
- Which of the objects on your list are symbols? Cartoonists use
simple objects, or symbols, to stand for larger concepts or ideas.
- What do you think each symbol means?
Words (not all cartoons
have words)
- Identify the cartoon caption or title.
- Locate three words or phrases used by the cartoonist to identify
objects or people within the cartoon. Cartoonists often label objects
or people to make it clear exactingly what they stand for. Watch
out for the different labels that appear in a cartoon, and ask yourself
why the cartoonist chose to label that particular person or object.
Does the label make the meaning of the object clearer?
- Record any important dates or numbers that appear in the cartoon.
- Which words or phrases in the cartoon appear to be the most significant?
- List adjectives that describe the emotions portrayed in the cartoon.
Interpretation
- Describe the action taking place in the cartoon.
- Explain how the words in the cartoon clarify the symbols.
- Explain the message of the cartoon.
- What is the cartoonist’s opinion on this issue?
- Who would agree or disagree with the cartoon’s message? Why?
- Did you find this cartoon informative? Why or why not?
- Did you find this cartoon persuasive (not all editorial cartoons
are drawn to persuade, however)? Why or why not?
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Sources
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