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Drawing the line: using cartoons as historical evidence
Editor : Richard Scully and Marian Quartly
Clayton, Vic. : Monash University ePress, c2009
ISBN: 9780980464849
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Book description
Drawing the Line: Using Cartoons as Historical Evidence
brings together essays from international scholars working with cartoons in
their research and teaching. It is a showcase for some of the best recent
scholarship in this field, with articles exploring racial and ethnic
stereotypes, as well as representations of youth, gender and class across a
number of key historical epochs.
Cartoons are among the most vivid and familiar images of past politics and
opinion, but tend to be used merely as 'illustrations' for historical works.
Drawing the Line, however, provides a comprehensive introduction to the
study of cartoons as sources in their own right. The British Regency Crisis,
post-Civil War US politics, Anglo-Iraqi interaction in the Second World War,
and Yugoslav Communist propaganda are just some of the themes through which
the effective use of cartoons in historical writing is explored.
Readers will also find guidance and suggestions for further research on
cartoons in the extensive introductory and concluding sections.
The book includes more than one hundred examples of the most brilliant
cartoon art of the past, from eighteenth-century satirical prints, to the
formalised satire of Punch, to the new and ever-evolving medium of
web-comics. It will be an essential resource for students and teachers
wanting to explore visual representations of the past, and will appeal to
all readers interested in innovative ways of writing history.
About the author
Richard Scully has been active in the writing and
teaching of history at tertiary level since 2004, when he commenced at
Monash University as a PhD candidate and sessional tutor. His research
interests centre on representations of Germany and the Germans in
Britain, 1860–1914, of which those presented in cartoons are only one
aspect – albeit the most interesting. After receiving his PhD from
Monash in 2008, Richard was appointed Lecturer in Modern European
History at the University of New England, Armidale, in 2009.
Marian Quartly has taught and researched Australian history at
Monash University for longer than she cares to remember. Her
publications include the co-authored Creating a Nation, a feminist
history of Australia. She is currently writing about gendered
citizenship (male and female), about museums and virtual communities,
and about the history of adoption in Australia. Her interest in visual
representations of gendered citizens – in this case of workers and
capitalists – arises out of the need to relate to a visually oriented
generation of students.
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