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Why do political cartoons always cause a ruckus? (charlotte observer)

(Kevin Siers) I always get nervous when academics write about political
cartooning. I usually come away with a nagging suspicion that someone studying
the profession from the outside just doesn't get it at all. True, debates
about political cartooning among the cartoonists themselves get so volatile
that I'm not sure the insiders totally understand what we're doing either.

But Victor Navasky, a professor at the Columbia Journalism School, and
chairman of the Columbia Journalism Review, having founded a magazine of
political satire in the 1950s, in addition to being the editor of The Nation
for many years, is probably less an outsider than most. He understands our
aims and is sympathetic to the cause. He also has insights to a question
prompted by the recent firebombing of the cartoon-laden French satirical
magazine Charlie Hebdo and the beating of a Syrian political cartoonist: What
is it about cartoons that prompt such violent reactions?

charlotte observer

Classic Game Room - WIZARD MAGAZINE Issue 105, June 2000 review