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British and German Cartoons as Weapons in World War I

Invectives and Ideology of Political Cartoons, a Cognitive Linguistics Approach

by Wolfgang Hünig (Author)
©2003 Monographs 242 Pages

Summary

On the basis of a corpus of 352 political cartoons published during the First World War in the British Punch and its German equivalent, Simplicissimus, the book presents a detailed, comparative study of cartoons in their historical context. The aim of the cartoons is to level invectives against the war enemy. Many of these are based on traditional stereotypes such as the Prussian militarist or the callous British businessman or colonialist. On the one hand, these stereotypes serve as reference points and on the other, they are thus further entrenched in the minds of the readers. The way in which the invectives are presented in the drawn scenes and their interplay with the headings and the captions elucidates the cultural differences with regard to humor, irony and sarcasm. The ideological background of the cartoons is betrayed by the way they simplify and manipulate reality.

Details

Pages
242
Year
2003
ISBN (Softcover)
9783631502112
Language
English
Keywords
propaganda history comics
Published
Frankfurt/M., Berlin, Bern, Bruxelles, New York, Oxford, Wien, 2002. 242 pp., num. fig. and tables

Biographical notes

Wolfgang Hünig (Author)

The Author: Wolfgang K. Hünig is a professor at the Institute of Foreign Languages at the Gerhard Mercator Universität Duisburg. He has worked as a visiting professor at the University of Hamburg (1996/98) and at the University of Kiel. Research in (critical) discourse analysis, semiotics, pragmatics, stylistics, lexicology, English for specific purposes and prosody.

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Title: British and German Cartoons as Weapons in World War I