In Chilton's essay she talks about the problems Mexico is currently having with the drug cartels and how the Mexican government goes unmentioned and unappreciated for the great lengths they're taking to regain their country (by jailing drug lords, jailing them in the U.S, and decriminalizing small amounts of drugs). From what I've read an watched on the news I do agree 100% with Chilton's argument. You always see on the news all these horrible things happening in Mexico because of the drug cartels Murders, abductions, carjackings, riots. But the news never really says anything about the Mexican government and what they're trying to do to stop the ongoing drug war.
The cartoon illustrated by Nate Beeler would be very hard to interpret in any other way than stated by Chilton. You have the muscle man with the bat (labeled Drug cartel) hitting the small pinata (labeled Mexico) whose stomach splits open releasing thousands of skulls (with a halo glowing around them all to depict innocence). What else can you get from that other than the drug cartels are bashing Mexico and killing innocent people. Let me contradict myself in saying other readers might get something different from the background aspect of the cartoon (the dead tree and barren wasteland). I see it as meaning no hope, in a sense that if you're wandering in the desert you have little to no chance in finding a pond, or lake of any sort to drink from. And the tree dead and lifeless, the pinata tied to the tree, the tree being kind of like a crutch but as you can see not a very good one as its dying it leaves the pinata defenseless.
Popular Posts
-
In the poem Bless Their Hearts by Richard Newman, he talks about the expression "Bless their hearts" and how its used by many peop...
-
In Chilton's essay she talks about the problems Mexico is currently having with the drug cartels and how the Mexican government goes unm...
-
This cartoon is addressing the starvation problem in Somalia. The chubby man (USA) fills himself with less important things such as sex sc...
-
A response to Goldsteins essay. I believe That cartoons in general are a safer medium for political expression because not everyone would...
-
These poems are different than ones we've previously read because, they tell a story. Rather than drawing the reader in with some witty ...
-
The starvation problem in Somalia. Mr Obama is trying to be funny on T.V and the little Somalian children just don't understand hi...
-
The two cartoons I chose deal with the starvation problem in Somalia and how the U.S just doesn't care. Somalia has been burdened by con...
-
While I was sitting outside of Bennett Hall I noticed how hot out it was and I started sweating :\. Then A huge Tool decides to walk out in ...
-
My reaction to the "more than just dolls" page is, I agree with it 100%. Young girls do look at dolls and get that image stuck in ...
-
Ive visited and stayed on both OU and MU campuses so I know a bit about each of them. OU's website shows the calmer more peaceful side o...
Your second paragraph is great. You are "reading" the cartoon with a critical eye. Perhaps there is no hope, you say, because the government has no power to fix the problem. Perhaps that was the cartoonist's main idea. In fact, he didn't draw a symbol for the government. Why not? They are nowhere to be seen. Rhetoric is both what is shown and what is left out. Great!
ReplyDeleteGood work. Keep it up.
SM