reviewed by Matt Wuerker
John. A. Lent. Asian Political
Cartoons. University Press of Mississippi, 2023. https://www.upress.state.ms.us/Books/A/Asian-Political-Cartoons
At the risk of revealing my own shallow occidental ethnocentrism, I have to say that I was largely ignorant of the cartoon culture of Asia. I have always had the general idea that cartooning was something that was particular to Europe, especially England and France, but also Spain, Germany and Italy.
It’s true that what we in the west think of as the political cartoon did come out of Europe. But, like meat pies, macaroni, and beer, cartooning spread from there through colonial expansion to other parts of the world. Some of those colonial territories were very fertile ground for this crude, yet very powerful and popular form of art, I think of South America in particular. But I always suffered from the mistaken notion that Asia was largely not taken with the idea of political commentary in the form of exaggerated drawing combined with humorous word bubbles. John Lent’s new book “Asian Political Cartoons” shows me how wrong that impression was.
In 300 mostly-color and beautifully-laid-out pages Lent takes us deep into the rich and culturally complicated history of the political cartoon in a part of the world that has seen staggering and tumultuous political change over the last century.
While all these cultures enjoyed unique traditions of their own in the visual arts, the arrival of the colonial powers introduced the novel and odd European concept that political dissent can be expressed in funny pictures and distributed in penny sheets and humor magazines. In China for instance suddenly there were China Punch, Shanghai Charivari, and Shanghai Puck all imitating their Western antecedents. The simple power of thumbing your nose at power and authority with arresting caricatures and graphic exaggeration has an innate appeal. It spread quickly.
Ironically enough as Chinese nationalism and the struggle against colonial occupation started to build this same graphic form was turned against the imperialists, and not just those from the West.
Political cartoons don’t always use humor, but instead can express deadly serious outrage. In the war with the Japanese Chinese political cartoonists marshaled their craft to contribute to the war effort. Lent shows how these cartoonists melded their classical Chinese ink drawing styles with more Western cartoon imagery to create devastating war propaganda posters.
The Philippine cartoonists also used a similar kind of jujitsu and turned this colonial art form against those that would colonize them. First sharpening their pens on their nineteenth century Spanish occupiers, they then turned their fire on their twentieth century American occupiers.
Philippine nationalists used
satirical magazines, often graced with cartoons on their front covers to
lambast those who had colonized them as well lampoon their own compatriots who
were going along with and embracing being colonized.
As the book ranges all across Asia, it also highlights the five decades that Lent has dedicated to studying and chronicling the cartoon culture across the continent. He’s met and personally knows many of the prominent practitioners, as well as many of the new generation. It’s a grand tour through cartoon territory not very well known by many of us. A journey well worth taking.
Wuerker is a practicing cartoonist for Politico, and has won the Pulitzer, Berryman and Herblock awards/prizes.
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