Politics, Ink: How Cartoonists Skewer America's Politicians, from King George III to George Dubya / Edition 1

Politics, Ink: How Cartoonists Skewer America's Politicians, from King George III to George Dubya / Edition 1

by Edward J. Lordan
ISBN-10:
0742536386
ISBN-13:
2900742536387
Pub. Date:
10/21/2005
Publisher:
Politics, Ink: How Cartoonists Skewer America's Politicians, from King George III to George Dubya / Edition 1

Politics, Ink: How Cartoonists Skewer America's Politicians, from King George III to George Dubya / Edition 1

by Edward J. Lordan

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Overview

This fun and extensively illustrated book tells the story of the American political cartoon, from its origins over 250 years ago to today. Edward Lordan gives us a tour of artists, politics, media, American society, and the technology of cartooning, including the work of Benjamin Franklin, Paul Revere, Currier & Ives, Thomas Nast, Dr. Seuss, Pat Oliphant, Draper Hill, Tom Toles, Ted Rall, Mike Keefe, and countless others. Interviews with today's political cartoonists—including Pulitzer winners Ann Telnaes and Signe Wilkinson—go behind the art form, to show how and why we respond to editorial cartoons as well as what syndication and the Internet mean to the future of political cartooning.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 2900742536387
Publication date: 10/21/2005
Pages: 208
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 1.25(h) x 9.00(d)

About the Author

Edward J. Lordan has written more than 500 columns, reviews, features, and news articles for newspapers including the Philadelphia Metro. He is a communications and public relations consultant and he is an assistant professor of communication at West Chester State University (Pennsylvannia). He lives in Wallingford, Pennsylvania, near Philadelphia.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1 Preface
Part 2 Part I: The History of American Political Cartoons
Chapter 3 1 Cartoons and the Birth of the Nation (1740 to 1785)
Chapter 4 2 Complexity in Government and Media (1786 to 1860)
Chapter 5 3 The Medium Matures (1860 to 1900)
Chapter 6 4 World Wars and Economic Depression (1900 to 1945)
Chapter 7 5 Cartooning in the Broadcast Era (1946 to 2000)
Part 8 Part II: The State of the Art: The Modern Editorial Cartoon
Chapter 9 6 Creators and Consumers
Chapter 10 7 Process and Effect
Chapter 11 8 In Their Own Words: Cartoonists on Cartooning
Chapter 12 9 Epilogue: The Future of American Editorial Cartoons
Chapter 13 Bibliography
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