Controversial newspaper caricatures

Controversial newspaper caricatures

There are several incidents involving controversial caricatures in the press media.

Contents

International stories

Muhammed cartoons and response

The Arab world

Many Muslim Middle Eastern newspapers have frequently published cartoons with allegedly anti-Semitic themes, or those created or inspired by Nazi-style propaganda. These newspapers have generally claimed to be anti-Israeli but not anti-Jewish. Some examples:

  • On June 6, 2002, Akhbar al-Khalij from Bahrain published a cartoon showing an Israeli Jew piercing a baby with a spear.
  • On July 24, 2002 Al Watan from Qatar published a cartoon of Ariel Sharon, the then Prime Minister of Israel, drinking from a cup of Palestinian children's blood.
  • On December 17, 2001, Keyhan published a cartoon showing a Jewish Israeli Soldier in front of a Holocaust scenery, killing Arabs.
  • Almost all Israeli prime ministers in the last 15 years (Shamir, Peres, Rabin, Barak, Sharon) have been depicted as Nazis. Israeli Jews have been depicted as spiders,[5] octopuses,[6] scorpions,[7] snakes,[8] thieves or other menacing-looking persons with exaggerated "Jewish" characteristics.
  • On May 17, 2001 the Palestinian Al Quds published a cartoon depicting then Prime Minister of Israel, Ariel Sharon, eating Palestinian children.

By country

Spain

  • On July 20, 2007, the cartoon on the front page of the weekly satirical magazine El Jueves whose front page carried a drawing of Crown Prince Felipe having sex with his wife and commenting on a government plan to give parents 2 500 for each child born.[9] Judge Juan del Olmo ruled that the cartoon "struck at the honour and dignity of the people represented."

Canada

France

  • In May 2002, Le Monde in France published a cartoon comparing the destruction following the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising with the destruction caused by Israeli military following the Battle of Jenin. The text below it says: "History has a strange way of repeating itself!"

Indonesia

On 27 March 2006, Indonesian daily Rakyat Merdeka published a cartoon on its front page depicting the Australian Prime Minister and Foreign minister as dingoes discussing the acquisition of the Indonesian province of West Papua. A cartoonist in The Australian responded on 1 April with a cartoon depicting the Indonesian President as a dog copulating with a West Papuan.

Iran

Mexico

  • Mexican cartoonists enjoy a broad freedom of speech, and so they have commented about almost every possible aspect of the political and common life. This freedom of speech has allowed the publication of cartoons which are normal in Mexico, but quite controversial in the American point of view. For example, two days after the September 11 attacks, La Jornada newspaper published a cartoon where El Fisgon makes a comparison between the attacks and the multiple US military operations.[11] La Jornada also published in September 2001 another cartoon where Magu states that: "As the world (global) policemen of the new millennium, the Americans are using torture techniques invented by the Mexican police in the last century".[12] The freedom of speech extends to other Mexican newspapers. El Universal (Mexico City) published several cartoons where Boligan criticizes American military operations in Iraq,[13] specially presenting a pair of soldiers as vultures who complain about the Mexican illegal immigration to the US, when at the same time they are invading Iraq.[14]

United Kingdom

  • On January 27, 2003, the day before Israeli elections, British newspaper The Independent published a cartoon[15][dead link] depicting the Israeli prime minister Ariel Sharon naked (with an Election badge acting as a Fig-leaf) sitting among bombed houses eating a baby while helicopters and tanks buzzed 'Vote Sharon', with Sharon saying "What's wrong, haven't you seen a politician kissing babies before". The cartoon was based on Goya's Saturn Devouring His Son and was penned after a pre-election raid by Israeli missiles on Gaza City. The cartoon was eventually selected as the "Cartoon of the Year" by the United Kingdom's Political Cartoon Society. The Israeli embassy, backed by the Sharon government, issued a complaint saying the cartoon was anti-semitic, however the Press Watchdog, the press complaints commission, said of the cartoon; "There is nothing inherently anti-semitic about the Goya image or about the myth of Saturn devouring his children, which has been used previously to satirise other politicians accused of sacrificing their own 'children' for political purposes".

United States

  • Racist caricatures of African Americans have also appeared in the United States before the American Civil Rights Movement, and occasionally since then as well.
  • During World War II, several American newspapers and major animated studios put out cartoons and films depicting the Japanese with exaggerated Asian features and as being untrustworthy or trickster figures, echoing the anti-Japanese racist sentiments common during the war period.
  • A cartoon in Los Angeles Times, published in October 2000, shows a Jew and a Muslim, praying at a wall where the stones are formed to read "Hate". Below the cartoon the inscription says "Worshiping their God". According to the cartoonist, it showed "BOTH Israelis AND Palestinians worshipping 'hate.'"[16]
  • Jesus with erection is a controversial satirical cartoon published in 2006 in a student newspaper at University of Oregon.
  • Jesus Dress Up is a game that was created by artist Normal Bob Smith in 1991 as a black-and-white colorform, which he photocopied and distributed to friends.

References


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно сделать НИР?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Chronologie De La Controverse Des Caricatures De Mahomet — Cet article traite de la chronologie de la crise internationale des caricatures de Mahomet du Jyllands Posten. Déroulement des évènements qui ont suivi la publication de caricatures de Mahomet le 30 septembre 2005. Cet article décrit… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Chronologie de la controverse des caricatures de Mahomet — Cet article traite de la chronologie de la crise internationale des caricatures de Mahomet du Jyllands Posten. Déroulement des évènements qui ont suivi la publication de caricatures de Mahomet le 30 septembre 2005. Cet article décrit… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Chronologie de la controverse des caricatures de mahomet — Cet article traite de la chronologie de la crise internationale des caricatures de Mahomet du Jyllands Posten. Déroulement des évènements qui ont suivi la publication de caricatures de Mahomet le 30 septembre 2005. Cet article décrit… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Student newspaper — Front page of the first edition of The Daily Tar Heel a student newspaper of University of North Carolina from 1892 …   Wikipedia

  • The Cadre (newspaper) — The Cadre is the student run newspaper of University of Prince Edward Island in Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island. The Cadre is usually published twice monthly, but internal issues, such as staff leaving for illness, have resulted in… …   Wikipedia

  • Libertad de expresión y blasfemia — Existe una tensión permanente entre libertad política, principalmente en lo relativo a la libertad de expresión y ciertas formas de arte, literatura, discurso y otros actos considerados sacrilegio o blasfemia por una pequeña parte de la población …   Wikipedia Español

  • Freedom of speech versus blasphemy — Tension often exists between political freedom, particularly freedom of speech, and certain examples of art, literature, speech or other acts considered by some to be sacrilegious or blasphemous. The extent to which this tension has not been… …   Wikipedia

  • Panic (comic) — Panic was part of the EC Comics line during the early 1950s. The bi monthly humor comic, published by Bill Gaines as a companion to Harvey Kurtzman s Mad . Panic was edited by Al Feldstein (who became the editor of Mad a few years later).… …   Wikipedia

  • Jyllands-Posten Muhammad cartoons controversy — The controversial cartoons of Muhammad, as they were first published in Jyllands Posten in September 2005 (English version). Th …   Wikipedia

  • Timeline of the Jyllands-Posten Muhammad cartoons controversy — This is the timeline of the Jyllands Posten Muhammad cartoons controversy. The cartoons were first published by Jyllands Posten in late September 2005; approximately two weeks later, nearly 3,500 people demonstrated peacefully in Copenhagen. In… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”