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What's So Funny?: Under the Skin of South African Cartooning

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Double Storey, Jan 15, 2011 - History - 248 pages
Andy Mason embarks on a fascinating journey through the history of South African cartooning, tracing a vigorous lineage of satirical art that begins in the colonial period and continues unabated to this day. For hundreds of years, democratic societies have set aside a space – the ‘jester’s space’ – where satirists are given license to taunt and mock the rich and powerful. This tradition has survived the bitter struggles of South African history, and the ongoing encounter between pen and sword continues to produce powerful, sometimes agonising images of a nation battling to come to terms with its own identity. Told with an autobiographical slant and based on interviews with most of South Africa’s top cartoonists and satirists, What’s So Funny? provides a unique glimpse into the world of our visual jesters, how they go about their work, where they find their ideas, and what drives them in their frenzied pursuit of the next laugh.

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About the author (2011)

ANDY MASON is a cartoonist in his own right (N.D.Mazin), has written several articles on the role of cartoons in South African culture and society, was the consultant editor on The Mandela Files, and is the founder of The Jester's Space - a monthly forum at which cartoonists present and discuss their work. He is working on setting up a Centre for Cartooning, Illustration and Book Art (CCIBA) to be attached to the faculty of Arts and Human Sciences at the University of Stellenbosch, where he will head the Centre's Cartooning and Comic Art Unit. He is also currently teaching cartooning at the University of Stellenbosch, South Africa.

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