This link has been bookmarked by 12 people . It was first bookmarked on 17 May 2008, by J Rice.
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15 Aug 09
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28 Jan 09
Kim BiggsThis lesson would be interesting for students to learn about abstraction and realism because almost everyone likes cartoons. It would be an engaging, education and fun lesson for the entire class.
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22 Jan 09
Mary Elizabeth MeierCartoons are often conceived as both humorous and deeply serious. Combining both fictional and non-fictional elements, cartoons have been used as a subversive or radical medium to comment on and critique the mainstream. Often providing a forum for visual protest, political cartoons present diverse perspectives on the pertinent issues of the day. Whether in form or content, many contemporary artists have a strong connection to the comic aesthetic and the comic critique. Drawing from their work, this lesson explores how cartoons use both representational and abstract visual language and messages to narrate social and political concerns.
cartoon lesson_plan inspiration resource big_idea history political_cartoons
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08 Jul 08
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17 Apr 07
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26 Feb 07
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17 Feb 07
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10 Sep 06
David Boxeral and non-fictional elements, cartoons have been used as a subversive or radical medium to comment on and critique the mainstream. Often providing a forum for visual protest, political cartoons present diverse perspectives on the pertinent issues of the
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25 Feb 05
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11 Oct 99
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