Christopher Gilbert is Assistant Professor of English at Assumption College.
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Description
"This study offers a valuable extension of the important work of Martha Banta, Henry Wonham, and others who have studied caricature in American culture. Gilbert has read widely in this literature, linking it to critical approaches to humor in general and to new modes of interpreting visual caricature in particular. Just as important, however, is his superb delineation of the ways in which humor has factored in the intricate interplay between national character, global combat, and the dynamics of democratic culture."-John Wharton Lowe, author of Calypso Magnolia: The Crosscurrents of Caribbean and Southern Literature "By examining the editorial cartoons of James Montgomery Flagg, Theodor Geisel (Dr. Seuss), Ollie Harrington, and Ann Telnaes-whose powerful imagery 'animated American values in war cultures from the First World War forward'-Gilbert provides a vigorously argued account of the contribution of political cartooning to the construction and deconstruction of contending national myths."-Kent Worcester, author of Silent Agitators: Cartoon Art from the Pages of "New Politics"