Political Caricature RPH
Political Caricature RPH
Political Caricature RPH
MCCOY’S PHILIPPINE
CARTOONS: POLITICAL
CARICATURE OF THE
AMERICAN ERA (1900-1941)
GROUP 3
NORBEN MARUQUIN
JOHN KENNETH LAFORTEZA
STEVEN JHON YANIT
POLITICAL CARICATURE
A political cartoon, also known as an editorial cartoon, is a
cartoon graphic with caricatures of public figures,
expressing the artist’s opinion. An artist who writes and
draws such images is known as an editorial cartoonist.
They typically combine artistic skill, hyperbole and satire
in order to either question authority or draw attention to
corruption, political violence and other social ills.
ALFRED
WILLIAM
MCCOY
JUNE 8, 1945, CONCORD,
MASSACHUSETTS, U.S.A
• Alfred W. McCoy is a
professor of History at the
University of Wisconsin
where he also served as
Director of Center foro
Southeast Asian Studies –
specialized in Philippine
Political History and Global
Opium Trafficking.
BACKGROUND OF THE
AUTHOR
McCoy has spent the past thirty years writing about Southeast Asian history
and politics. His publications include Philippine Cartoons (1985), Anarchy of
Families (1994), Closer Than Brothers: Manhood at the Philippine Military
Academy (2000) and Lives at the Margin (2001).
After earning a Ph.D. in Southeast Asian history at Yale, the writings of
McCoy on this region has focused on two topics Philippine political history
and global opium trafficking. The Philippines remains the major focus of his
research. His teaching interests include: Modern Philippine social and political
history; U.S. foreign policy; colonial empires in Southeast Asia; global illicit
drug trafficking; and CIA covert operations.
BACKGROUND OF THE
DOCUMENT
1990-1941