Humour and intertextuality in Steve Bell's political cartoons

The aim of this paper is to analyse 12 political cartoons published by Steve Bell in the left-wing oriented newspaper The Guardian to show how visual metaphors and metonymies and intertextual references are powerful strategies to present potent rhetorical depictions of political candidates and polit...

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Main Author: Maria Jesús Pinar
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Cracow Tertium Society for the Promotion of Language Studies 2020-10-01
Series:The European Journal of Humour Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.europeanjournalofhumour.org/index.php/ejhr/article/view/467
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spelling doaj-23685e9297984f2c9e16f2084d21516b2021-03-02T18:51:15ZengCracow Tertium Society for the Promotion of Language StudiesThe European Journal of Humour Research2307-700X2020-10-0183163910.7592/EJHR2020.8.3.Pinar-Sanz349Humour and intertextuality in Steve Bell's political cartoonsMaria Jesús Pinar0University of Castilla-la ManchaThe aim of this paper is to analyse 12 political cartoons published by Steve Bell in the left-wing oriented newspaper The Guardian to show how visual metaphors and metonymies and intertextual references are powerful strategies to present potent rhetorical depictions of political candidates and political issues. These devices are used to establish intertextual links across political cartoons and historical events, contemporary culture, paintings, literary works and illustrations. The themes that appear regularly in political cartoons have been identified, as well as a number of categories of source domains in visual metaphors. The analysis of the cartoons reveals that the interpretation of the cartoon and the appreciation of humour depend on the audience’s access to background knowledge, both of the political situation described in the cartoon and the intertextual references presented, on the audience’s ideology and on the decoding of the characteristics mapped onto the target of the metaphor.https://www.europeanjournalofhumour.org/index.php/ejhr/article/view/467political cartoonintertextualityvisual metaphorbackground knowledge
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Maria Jesús Pinar
spellingShingle Maria Jesús Pinar
Humour and intertextuality in Steve Bell's political cartoons
The European Journal of Humour Research
political cartoon
intertextuality
visual metaphor
background knowledge
author_facet Maria Jesús Pinar
author_sort Maria Jesús Pinar
title Humour and intertextuality in Steve Bell's political cartoons
title_short Humour and intertextuality in Steve Bell's political cartoons
title_full Humour and intertextuality in Steve Bell's political cartoons
title_fullStr Humour and intertextuality in Steve Bell's political cartoons
title_full_unstemmed Humour and intertextuality in Steve Bell's political cartoons
title_sort humour and intertextuality in steve bell's political cartoons
publisher Cracow Tertium Society for the Promotion of Language Studies
series The European Journal of Humour Research
issn 2307-700X
publishDate 2020-10-01
description The aim of this paper is to analyse 12 political cartoons published by Steve Bell in the left-wing oriented newspaper The Guardian to show how visual metaphors and metonymies and intertextual references are powerful strategies to present potent rhetorical depictions of political candidates and political issues. These devices are used to establish intertextual links across political cartoons and historical events, contemporary culture, paintings, literary works and illustrations. The themes that appear regularly in political cartoons have been identified, as well as a number of categories of source domains in visual metaphors. The analysis of the cartoons reveals that the interpretation of the cartoon and the appreciation of humour depend on the audience’s access to background knowledge, both of the political situation described in the cartoon and the intertextual references presented, on the audience’s ideology and on the decoding of the characteristics mapped onto the target of the metaphor.
topic political cartoon
intertextuality
visual metaphor
background knowledge
url https://www.europeanjournalofhumour.org/index.php/ejhr/article/view/467
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