![]() ![]() The turn of the century also witnessed emergence of articulate anti-imperialist voices worldwide-and this movement had its own powerful wing of incisive graphic artists. This early outburst of what we refer to today as clash-of-civilizations thinking did not go unchallenged, however. ![]() Most viewers will probably agree that there is nothing really comparable in the contemporary world of political cartooning to the drafting skill and flamboyance of these single-panel graphics, which appeared in such popular periodicals as Puck and Judge. The imperialist rhetoric of “civilization” versus “barbarism” that took root during these years was reinforced in both the United States and England by a small flood of political cartoons-commonly executed in full color and with meticulous attention to detail. conquest and occupation of the Philippines initiated in 1899 and the anti-foreign Boxer Uprising in China that provoked intervention by eight foreign nations in 1900. Three savage turn-of-the-century conflicts defined the milieu in which such rhetoric flourished: the Anglo-Boer War of 1899–1902 in South Africa the U.S. In Kipling’s often-quoted phrase, this noble mission required willingness to engage in “savage wars of peace.” Rudyard Kipling’s famous poem “The White Man’s Burden” was published in 1899, during a high tide of British and American rhetoric about bringing the blessings of “civilization and progress” to barbaric non-Western, non-Christian, non-white peoples. ![]()
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