
Contents
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Historical Overview Historical Overview
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The Weakening of Political Cartoons The Weakening of Political Cartoons
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Contemporary Political Cartooning Contemporary Political Cartooning
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A Brief Conclusion A Brief Conclusion
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Notes Notes
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Bibliography Bibliography
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Cite
Abstract
This chapter turns to Japanese political cartooning. It begins with a historical overview, illustrating Japan's especially rich tradition of caricature, satire, and narrative. Indeed, Japanese culture has long brimmed with caricature, satire/parody, humor/playfulness, and narrative/sequence, though the latter is not as important in the realm of political cartoons. However, as the chapter shows, generally, the single-panel political cartoon lost its edge and was marginalized with the postwar rise of story comic books (manga), whose lucrative market attracted most of the skilled cartoonists at a time when some cartoon-friendly periodicals were dying. Not to mention that the increasing indecisiveness of politicians made for uninteresting drawings. These trends had a lot to do with the weakening of Japanese political cartoons, which led to the present state of the profession.
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