this cartoon was posted on the Hawaii History Chat Group on Facebook by Arnold Hokulani Kinau, from The World newspaper, New York, 14 December 1893 |
In researching this political cartoon, I learned
about the newspaper that printed it in 1893.
The World was published by
Joseph Pulitzer in New York City between 1860 and 1931. It is interesting to read the history of the
newspaper, since its publisher was so famous.
The World was most infamous
for its “yellow journalism” and muckraking stories. In one scandal in 1864 it forged papers from
Abraham Lincoln, causing The World to
be shut down for three days. It seems
fitting that such a scandal sheet would publish such an offensive political
cartoon.
However, even though it pioneered “yellow journalism”,
The World was well known for other reasons, often to its credit. Nellie Bly, not only one of the first woman
reporters, started some of the first investigative journalism. The World pioneered four color
printing. It also published the first
newspaper crossword puzzles in 1913.
Best of all, it ran a series of articles blasting the Ku Klux Klan in
the 1920s. Their articles at this time
period often supported the underdog in the story, and were pro-immigration.
Joseph Pulitzer went on to become the founding
benefactor of the Columbia Graduate School of Journalism in New York City. As an
immigrant from Hungary, he went on to become a member of the House of
Representatives (1885 -1886) and died a millionaire. The Pulitzer Prize was established
posthumously after his death in 1911. It
is interesting to note that Pulitzer’s lasting legacies don’t reflect his
personal record in publishing.
Joseph Pulitzer (1847 - 1911) |
Yellow Journalism was well known for its scandalous
headlines and sensational news stories with little or no research. Today’s scandal sheets or tabloid newspapers sold in
full color by the grocery store checkout are the legacy of these newspapers. Political cartoons and
newspapers from the past are useful for genealogical research, we can often gain a glimpse
of life in the past that is not found in the usual genealogical sources. Definitely not politically correct by today’s
standards, this is the kind of journalism that was common in its own time. From this we can start to see why our
ancestors often held opinions we now consider incorrect, or why they voted,
wrote or acted in ways that now puzzle us. We can read these examples of
journalism from the past, but I still cannot believe how people fell for believing
this stuff! We haven’t come very far,
have we?
For the truly curious:
Wikipedia article on The World newspaper http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_York_World
A biography of Joseph Pulitzer- Pulitzer: A Life, by
Brian Denis, 2001 see the online edition
here http://www.questia.com/PM.qst?a=o&d=106751613
Another biography, Pulitzer: A Life in Politics, Print and
Power, by James McGrath Morris, 2010
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Copyright 2011, Heather Wilkinson Rojo
excuse me can you tell me thhe symbolism in this picture
ReplyDeleteThe cartoon is a very derogatory depiction of Queen Lili'uokalani as a "barbarian". It is more of a warning. In 1893 American imperialists wanted to take over Hawaii, and were convinced that a "colored" leader was inadequate.
ReplyDelete