Parsing the Politics of Caricature, e.g., Rich Lowry Is a Moron

by Guest Contributor Jeff Yang, originally published at the Secret Identities Blog

Oh, man. As if we needed another reminder as to why cartoon art is a medium that can be used for evil as easily as good, comes now the next installment in a series of racist National Review covers trafficking in Asian stereotypical imagery.

You’ll remember, of course, that back in March 1997, the National Review released the infamous “Manchurian Candidates” cover seen here (which, due to the fact that the Internet was just a tot when that slice of tripe hit the newsstands, I was only able to find in greyscale — embedded in a journal article written by Darrell Hamamoto, w00t!)

Asian Americans understandably reacted with stunned rage at the depiction of then-President Bill Clinton, First Lady Hillary Clinton, and Vice-President Al Gore in stereotypical Chinese garb, their features warped into exaggerated Asian caricatures (slanted eyes, buck teeth).

The National Review was unrepentant in the face of charges that the cartoon was offensive and inflammatory, responding, in part, that:

“Caricatures and cartoons … require exaggerated features and, where a social type is portrayed, a recognizable stereotype. Thus, a cartoonist who wants to depict an Englishman will show him wearing a monocle and bowler hat, a Frenchman in beret and striped jersey, a Russian in fur hat, dancing the gopak, etc.”

The first point can’t entirely be disputed: The cartoon medium often uses simplified, exaggerated features for emphasis, for satirical purpose and for ease in depicting broad emotion.

But it’s one thing to exaggerate features — Obama’s protruding ears invariably become giant jug-handles when he’s rendered, for instance. (The Mike Ramirez cartoon below actually essentializes Obama’s appearance down to his ears — and still manages to make its point clear.)

It’s another to incorporate racialized features that weren’t there to begin with: For instance, consider these images — a caricature of Obama from an “Obama Waffles” package, as gleefully sold during the right-wing “Values Voters Summit,” and a close-up of Obama’s official portrait from his days as Senator from Illinois.

Apart from being overtly racist, the caricature on the box doesn’t remotely resemble Obama — with its pop-eyed expression, darkened skin, enormous, toothy grin and thick lips, it looks a lot more like…well, the picture below can speak for itself, I guess.

Going back to the National Review “Manchurian Candidates” cover now, what you see is that there’s more going on in the images of the Clintons and Gore than the typical flamboyant exaggeration used in cartooning. In addition to Bill’s bulbous nose and Gore’s pursed, almost sneering lips (both typical of their respective caricatures), you see…hmm…narrowed eyes…oversized, bucked teeth…a Fu Manchu moustache — hey, just about every racist synecdoche in the anti-Asian propaganda library! (At least the stuff that belongs above the waist.)

Just to be clear here: It’s one thing if they were simply drawn in Chinese clothing or doing quaint folkdances, as suggested by the National Review in its disgenuous response. That would arguably be in-bounds satirically (regardless of whether you find the political point being made to be fair or accurate).

But layering yellowface-propaganda memes into the picture transforms the caricature from an act of humor into an act of war. The images above are examples of what I’m talking about.

Even if you’re insensitive enough to racial propriety to want to give white people Asian features in order to prove a political point, that simply isn’t what Asian people look like, and never has been. The squinty, buck-toothed Asian person with bright yellow skin and eyes angled at ten minutes to two does not exist in nature. However much you soften it, those false features are in fact weapons of mass destruction, artifacts of an era where it was used to dehumanize the enemy enough so they could be killed without compunction.

For that reason, there’s no acceptable way they should be invoked in a casual popular context, any more than minstrel stereotypes or anti-semitic “Elders of Zion” caricatures have a place in everyday culture. Discouragingly, they remain persistent in media today — from entertainment (see left: Rob Schneider in 2007’s “I Now Pronounce You Chuck and Larry“) to news and commentary. Well, actually not most news and commentary — it’s really only the profoundly racist right-wing organs that still blithely fart out the yellowface imagery. Like, for instance…the National Review.

This cover to the right is the current issue of the magazine, on stands now. As you can see, it depicts Supreme Court nominee Sonia Sotomayor as the Buddha. Despite the fact that Sotomayor is Catholic and a Latina woman. While the historical Buddha, Siddhārtha Gautama, was Hindu (before the whole Bodhi tree thing), and an Asian man.

The caption, “The Wise Latina,” frankly offers no real f*cking explanation for the image. I suppose it’s because the Buddha was wise, although you could just as easily have depicted Sotomayor as King Solomon if you’re looking for a legendary figure of wisdom; maybe it’s because to the raving radical Right, Buddha is seen as a proto-hippie and probably a pansy too, while King Solomon, that guy threatened to cut babies in half — not very pro-life, but not “empathetic” either. Badass!

But seriously: If they wanted a figure of wisdom and empathy, why not caricature Sotomayor as someone who’s of the right gender and a coreligionist, at least: Mother Teresa? That would have preserved the necessary level of corrosive offensiveness, right? Too close to home?

Whatever. As it is, the cover is just stupid and meaningless, as well as offensive — to women, to Latinas, to Buddhists of all backgrounds (note: The National Review guys are of the same ilk that went ballistic when Rolling Stone depicted Kanye as Jesus), and yes, to Asians. But it bears mentioning that it registers as EPIC FAIL even in the offending Asians category.

Because, unlike their “Manchurian Candidates” cover, where at least they picked the correct racist stereotypes to parade, the “Wise Latina” cover puts the hideously slanted eyes and bucked teeth of East Asian yellowface stereotype onto an image inspired by a Northern Indian man of Brahmin descent.

In fact, to the left here you can see the original image of Siddhārtha Gautama Buddha that the artist used as a reference (it’s actually quite a popular icon). Notice any differences?

As usual, National Review has been quick with a completely absurd and totally disingenuous retort to the appalled reactions they’ve been getting from, you know, everyone. From editor-in-chief Rich Lowry:

“I take it the theory is that we don’t think Latinas can be wise so we had to make her look somewhat Asian. Or something like that. What these people don’t understand is the entire concept of caricature (or of a joke). Caricature always involves exaggerating someone’s distinctive features, which is all that our artist Roman Genn did with Sotomayor. Oh, well. Keep it humorless, guys, keep it humorless.”

No, Rich, the theory is that you took a Latina woman and turned her into a North Indian man with horribly racist East Asian-stereotypical features because you guys are clueless morons. And actually, that’s kind of funny, in that Lowry and the National Review don’t quite get that the joke, ultimately, is on them.

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Trackbacks & Pings

  1. links for 2009-06-08 « Embololalia on 08 Jun 2009 at 2:37 pm

    [...] Parsing the Politics of Caricature, e.g., Rich Lowry Is a Moron at Racialicious – the intersec… No, Rich, the theory is that you took a Latina woman and turned her into a North Indian man with horribly racist East Asian-stereotypical features because you guys are clueless morons. And actually, that’s kind of funny, in that Lowry and the National Review don’t quite get that the joke, ultimately, is on them. (tags: cartoons scotus stereotypes racism) [...]

  2. Serenity - an expedition - Before Midnight: Nattering, Skin Cancer And Crowded Heads | nanettekelley.com on 09 Jun 2009 at 2:57 am

    [...] very good analysis of just what was wrong with that NRO Judge Sotomayor cover and the history behind some of the [...]

Comments

  1. FilthyGrandeur wrote:

    excellent post. i love how racists think they can get away with racism by writing it off as a joke, and accusing the offended with sensitivity, as well as being humorless. yes, exactly. you’re an asshole because i don’t know how to laugh…whatever.

  2. RJG wrote:

    …just checked out the illustrator’s website.

    Motherfuckin WAT:

    http://rgenn.com/gallery/pic.asp?iCat=37&iPic=55
    http://rgenn.com/gallery/pic.asp?iCat=69&iPic=277
    http://rgenn.com/gallery/pic.asp?iCat=66&iPic=344

    At this point I stopped checking because it’s too early to drink.

  3. dance wrote:

    There are some very nice close-up comparisons, supporting your post, here:
    http://edgeofthewest.wordpress.com/2009/06/07/photo-reference-at-the-national-review/

  4. Celeste wrote:

    I’m kinda torn between two positions. I don’t like that they think their white priviledge is so all-encompassing that they can get away with this and wish that they had the sense to not publish images like this. On the other hand if they hide it them we can’t address it. It’s not even funny or witty racism it’s just stupid and makes no sense, all it does is offend. It’s also really messed up that when they’re trying to make a racist attack on a Latina that Asians are out-of-no-where insulted as collateral damage. How about just being racist to one group at a time?
    I’m kinda tired as Kanye but he made a decent Jesus, I haven’t seen that cover before.

  5. Mary wrote:

    It’s kind of amazing, I think I saw this covered on pretty much every website I frequent that’s even remotely political. The cover is obviously offensive beyond belief, but I also have to laugh at how many disparate bloggers/blogging communities had exactly the same “WTF??” reaction.

  6. chris chambers wrote:

    The trouble is, he can hide behind the format: a pattern of covers. Ironically it’s much easier to go after a single discrete cartoon or panel rather than a series of covers. That is, of course, until he finally does cross even a bonehead’s line (like the New York Post “Obama-Ape” crap) and he can be hit w/out the publishers/wingnuts taking some perverse glee.

    The fact that he works for the Nat Review is not irrelevant or immaterial to the criticism. It’s germane to his POV and beliefs, and that in turn colors his style. I think the key is to simply teach the average moron who LIKES this stuff to think critically, because until this fool crosses the line, there’s nothing we can do about.

  7. N wrote:

    I agree that the yellowface and the caricatures are just WRONG.
    BUT, I disagree that they made Sotomayor look East Asian to go along with the Buddha image.

    I think the caricature of her face came first and because she does have slanted eyes, they decided to go with Asian imagery for the rest of the cover. In this case I believe the face itself was not meant to be racist and if it had been in another context, no biggie. But it is the context that does it.

  8. maus wrote:

    “In this case I believe the face itself was not meant to be racist ”

    It’s the National Review, for fuck’s sake. They have a long history of this.

  9. RJG wrote:

    @N

    Beyond just the context of who was depicted (and why), I would look into the context of who _illustrated_ the image.

    All illustrators, writers, and people have their occasional fuck-ups where they end up expressing something in a manner they didn’t really intend to, but when it happens _over and over again_ there comes a point where it’s worth acknowledging that they’re probably really meaning it that way.

  10. jordan wrote:

    I wonder if this cartoon and the other from the Oklahoman (where she is depicted as Mexican) intentionally depict Sotomayor’s ethnicity incorrectly to dis her? I suspect part of the antipathy toward Sotomayer involves conservative white folks taking offensive to her ethnic pride. The Oklahoman cartoon reduces all Latinas to Mexicans, while the Nat Review reduces all non-black-non-whiteness to…whatever is going on in this cartoon.

  11. Celeste wrote:

    @RJG: Those images were soooooo horrible.

  12. Anonymous wrote:

    I find it funny that every body likes to get on I now pronounce you chuck and larry when Rob Schneider is technically Asian consider that fact that his mom is Asian and he has a Filipino ethnicity

  13. Bobby wrote:

    Assuming that the cartoonists and editors are white, we can easily see why they would assume the images are not racist. To borrow from Sotomayor’s words, the National Review ppl have not lived the lives of Asians and Latinos. They lack the experience and background to come to better conclusions about racist imagery. Of course that doesn’t excuse them. We can invoke common sense to realize that these images are FUCKED UP.

  14. Sami wrote:

    I… wow.

    The comments here are also starting to get fail.

    @N: Epicanthic fold is not equal to “slanted eyes”. Where I come from, that’s more than a little racist in and of itself. “Slant-eyed” is a racist slur and her eyes are perfectly straight – she just has an epicanthic fold on her eyelids, just like an extremely substantial portion of the human race, and caricaturing it with the slant like that is *racist as fuck* all by itself, regardless of the rest of the image.

  15. Lyonside wrote:

    So what, Anonymous? (pick a tag, it’s not hard, ‘kay?)

    People of an ethnicity/race can easily be racist and do racist things against that race, especially when they think they’re being “funny.”

    Tell your friends at the National Review that their response was inadequate, clueless, and insulting. Just like yours.

  16. Doctor Nick wrote:

    Just a reminder: The National Review has never been profitable, ever. They stay afloat through donations and black-tie events.

  17. Jeff Yang wrote:

    @anonymous: There’s a sad yet significant tradition of people of color doing “colorface”—black performers in the 1860s regularly corked up for shows played to white audiences. I don’t think Rob Schneider’s turn was any different (except that he clearly has more of a choice NOT to do it than black minstrels of that era).

    Why do you think his being hapa Filipino absolves him of putting on horrible, caricature yellowface anyway?

    j

  18. Bud Fox wrote:

    I am not eating those pancakes!

  19. Paz wrote:

    I think the cover is a bizarre concept in the first place. Wise Latina? (a. are Latinas not wise by default? and b. why is she identified as a LATINA instead of a three dimensional human with a name?)

    But even if I bought into the Wise Latina thing, ok, I can understand making her look like Buddha since Buddha is famous for being wise. But why slant her eyes? The lotus position and robe get the point across.

    @RJG – Wow. Holy fuckery.

  20. Chris Diaz wrote:

    I think it was stupid and Latinos and Asians and Buddhists are rightly offended.

    The intent of the National Review staff, well, I can’t be certain.

    Although an innocent intent is a consideration, it is certainly a weak excuse. Depending on who you hang out with, the “acceptable” manner in which you talk about other peoples and culture ranges from strict respect to mild racial slurs to vicious racial slurs to wishing death upon them.

    I am especially suspicious with Conservatives. A high percentage of white Conservatives come from white Conservative upbrinings. Conservatives, on average feel that even extreme inequality is an acceptable outcome of captialism and that the marginalized are to blame for their plight.

    With that attitude, it is not difficult to see the connection to what they think about people who, collectively, don’t fit the image of the dominant, relatively better off, white society.

  21. Natalie wrote:

    Because, unlike their “Manchurian Candidates” cover, where at least they picked the correct racist stereotypes to parade, the “Wise Latina” cover puts the hideously slanted eyes and bucked teeth of East Asian yellowface stereotype onto an image inspired by a Northern Indian man of Brahmin descent.

    I wrote this in a comment at feministing as well, but I think the purpose the east asian transfer is meant to call to mind the Chinese style fat Buddha to remind us that republicans think think Sotomayor is too fat to do her job. (See the concern trolling about her health and the cause of her diabetes.) Which adds a layer of size-ism onto an already racist and sexist image.

  22. N wrote:

    @RJG Yes, its definitely worth looking into.

    @Jordan My daughter and niece both have the same sort of eyes as Sotomayor, slanted, relatively narrow and with epicanthic folds. So as far as the face, I’m not going to say that portrayal was incorrect. That they took her facial features then decided to see her as Asian, yes. I think its an accurate caricature but misidentified as Asian. If that makes sense.

    Kinda off the subject, I had so many doctors peering at my daughters palms and whispering about her when she was a newborn that I wanted to go mad. “SHE DOES NOT HAVE DOWN SYNDROME. SHE IS what in PR is called a “CHINA”!!!” So its kinda the same thing, seeing the eyes and face shape and pegging it as “Mongolian” rather than Puerto Rican.

    @anonymous

    I have yet to forgive Halle Berry for that Stepin Fetchit shit she did in BAPS. So Rob is not off the hook for being in yellowface just because he is “yellow”.

  23. method wrote:

    “Notice any differences?” Lowry seems like he has a lot of fun with the ugly ethnic caricatures, but for the sake of honesty:

    The main difference is that her eyes aren’t turned upward, and neither are they in the image of the Buddha. Other than that it’s pretty much her face from the picture on the body of the Buddha from the depiction. Her teeth aren’t bucktoothed in the caricature; they’re the same as in the photo, but the mouth is shaped differently.

    I don’t buy this line about how she should have been depicted as a “coreligionist”. The Buddha is part of human heritage, even if most Westerners are a bit vague on the details. What does it mean when supposedly liberal and worldly people see that caricature and *don’t* see that it represents the Buddha? “Why is she depicted as some Asian?”

  24. Asianlawyer wrote:

    I used to be a fan of National Review and much more politically conservative than I am these days. However one thing has not changed evne though I am more liberal now. I don not find these charicatures offensive. If they were of East Asian or South Asian figures, then yes that would offend me. However these characitures have nothing to do with the ethnicities of the people they are charicaturing. I give much more latitude to editorial cartoons. I mean would ya’ll find editorial cartoons with pics of cowboys or other American cultural icons to be bad portryals of Americans?

  25. Alex wrote:

    @ Paz: The “Wise Latina” label refers to a comment she made about herself and her experience.

  26. Fiqah wrote:

    ::: reads through thread :::

    :::raises eyebrows:::

    Um. Just…real quick.

    The commonly-accepted English term for eyes like Judge Sotomayor’s (and mine), with or without an epicanthic fold, is “almond-shaped.”

    :/