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Political Cartoons: More Than Meets The Eye Adapted from : https://sharepoint.whitfield.k12.ga.us/sites/.../Political%20Cartoons.ppt https://sharepoint.whitfield.k12.ga.us/sites/.../Political%20Cartoons.ppt.

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Presentation on theme: "Political Cartoons: More Than Meets The Eye Adapted from : https://sharepoint.whitfield.k12.ga.us/sites/.../Political%20Cartoons.ppt https://sharepoint.whitfield.k12.ga.us/sites/.../Political%20Cartoons.ppt."— Presentation transcript:

1 Political Cartoons: More Than Meets The Eye Adapted from : https://sharepoint.whitfield.k12.ga.us/sites/.../Political%20Cartoons.ppt https://sharepoint.whitfield.k12.ga.us/sites/.../Political%20Cartoons.ppt and www.eastconn.org/tah/Political%20Cartoon%20Skills%20Powerpoint.ppt

2  Art form that serves as a source of opinion on society.  Express viewpoints on political, economic, or social issues. Political Cartoons: What? Why?

3  What subject or issue is the artist commenting on?  How is the subject portrayed?  What feelings are suggested by the images? Artist’s Viewpoint

4  Caricature  Captions/Labels  Symbolism  Stereotype  Metaphor/analogy  Satire  Irony/Sarcasm Artist’s Toolkit

5  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. INTERPRETING POLITICAL CARTOONS

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8  CAPTIONS/LABELS- are used to clarify or add emphasis to the message of the cartoon. INTERPRETING POLITICAL CARTOONS

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10  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). INTERPRETING POLITICAL CARTOONS

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12  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. INTERPRETING POLITICAL CARTOONS

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14  METAPHOR/ANALOGY - uses an object to note a similarity to something else. For example, using a tiger to represent one nation invading another. INTERPRETING POLITICAL CARTOONS

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17  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. INTERPRETING POLITICAL CARTOONS

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19  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. Irony highlights the difference between how things are and how they ought to be. INTERPRETING POLITICAL CARTOONS

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21  SARCASM- is a form of irony. The element that turns irony into sarcasm is the appearance of mockery, or bitterness. INTERPRETING POLITICAL CARTOONS

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