This paper investigates media representations of international insecurity through a selection of newspaper cartoons from some of the major daily Australian broadsheets. Since 2001, cartoonists such as Bruce Petty, John Spooner and Bill Leak (in The Age and The Australian) have provided an ongoing and vehement critique of the Australian government’s policies of ‘border protection’, the ‘war on terror’ and the words of mass distraction associated with Australia joining the war in Iraq. Cartoonists are often said to represent the ‘citizen’s perspective’ of public life through their graphic satire on the editorial pages of our daily newspapers. Increasingly, they can also be seen to be fulfilling the role of public intellectuals, defined by Ric...
This study is an effort to explore the role of political cartoons in opinion building and the expect...
This paper is taken from the findings of the AHRC collaborative research grant ‘Comics and the World...
This study is an effort to explore the role of political cartoons in opinion building and the expect...
The thesis examines the role that Australian graphic satirists play in the theatre of public life. T...
Political cartoons are a ubiquitous form of satire which assists the public to interpret political l...
Political cartoons are a ubiquitous form of satire which assists the public to interpret political l...
New Zealand Herald cartoonist Malcolm Evans was dismissed from the newspaper after he refused t...
Despite their communicative power, cartoonists have often been viewed as the detached outsiders of t...
Copyright © The author(s). First published by Australian Review of Public Affairs 2004.In a previou...
© 2008 Copyright is vested in the authors. Apart from any fair dealing permitted according to the p...
This article by Michael Hogan is designed to open up a fairly untested area in the study of politics...
While cartoonists at a ‘Cartoons for Peace’ conference generally claimed that freedom of expression ...
The beginning of the new millennium (the year 2000 to 2010) has witnessed a dramatic increase in the...
Political illustration is now rarely commissioned in editorial publications unless it is in the form...
For all the technological developments that have punctuated the timeline of political cartooning, th...
This study is an effort to explore the role of political cartoons in opinion building and the expect...
This paper is taken from the findings of the AHRC collaborative research grant ‘Comics and the World...
This study is an effort to explore the role of political cartoons in opinion building and the expect...
The thesis examines the role that Australian graphic satirists play in the theatre of public life. T...
Political cartoons are a ubiquitous form of satire which assists the public to interpret political l...
Political cartoons are a ubiquitous form of satire which assists the public to interpret political l...
New Zealand Herald cartoonist Malcolm Evans was dismissed from the newspaper after he refused t...
Despite their communicative power, cartoonists have often been viewed as the detached outsiders of t...
Copyright © The author(s). First published by Australian Review of Public Affairs 2004.In a previou...
© 2008 Copyright is vested in the authors. Apart from any fair dealing permitted according to the p...
This article by Michael Hogan is designed to open up a fairly untested area in the study of politics...
While cartoonists at a ‘Cartoons for Peace’ conference generally claimed that freedom of expression ...
The beginning of the new millennium (the year 2000 to 2010) has witnessed a dramatic increase in the...
Political illustration is now rarely commissioned in editorial publications unless it is in the form...
For all the technological developments that have punctuated the timeline of political cartooning, th...
This study is an effort to explore the role of political cartoons in opinion building and the expect...
This paper is taken from the findings of the AHRC collaborative research grant ‘Comics and the World...
This study is an effort to explore the role of political cartoons in opinion building and the expect...