It's Not That Long Ago
Feb. 12th, 2006 02:32 pmBack in the early '50s Malcolm Muggeridge (as editor of Punch) published a cartoon of Churchill (then prime minister) as a senile old man (which he was) with a caption politely suggesting it was about time he stepped down- and there was all hell to pay!
In the same era it was taboo to publish a caricature of the Queen. If you absolutely had to have her in your cartoon, it was allowable to show her from the back or with her face artfully concealed. I believe it was Gerald Scarfe in Private Eye who finally demolished that convention.
And of course cartoon representations of God and Jesus and other holy personages were absolutely unthinkable.
In the same era it was taboo to publish a caricature of the Queen. If you absolutely had to have her in your cartoon, it was allowable to show her from the back or with her face artfully concealed. I believe it was Gerald Scarfe in Private Eye who finally demolished that convention.
And of course cartoon representations of God and Jesus and other holy personages were absolutely unthinkable.
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Date: 2006-02-12 07:18 am (UTC)(no subject)
From:no subject
Date: 2006-02-12 07:33 am (UTC)But you're right in that the West still has its censors and ocntention (I still remember the furor Last Temptation of Christ caused when it was released), although it's rare in the West when satirizing a religion results in mob violence and death.
(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:(no subject)
From:no subject
Date: 2006-02-12 08:43 am (UTC)(no subject)
From:Have a piece of Loyal Toast?
Date: 2006-02-12 04:44 pm (UTC)"God save their gracious ME,
Long live their noble ME,
God save ME,
Send ME victorious,
Happy and glorious,
Long to reign over THEM,
God save ME!"
Fortunately, Royalists (though a little muddle-headed, at least here in Australia, dont seem to go around torching cartoonists ...but they did eventually try to gaol him.
Re: Have a piece of Loyal Toast?
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