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Description
English: Carriers of the New Black Plague, 1938. Well preserved example of the original artwork for this provocative satirical pictorial map, addressing the varying levels of control of free speech exercised around the world, drawn by William Henry Cotton.

The illustration by Cotton, which served as the central double-page spread in the inaugural issue of Ken magazine, issued in April 1938, stands as a notable artifact of pre-World War II American culture. Ken magazine, recognized for its anti-Fascist stance, chose this piece for its powerful political commentary. The artwork, replicated without notable alterations in the design from the maquette to the final print, is nearly double the size of the its magazine counterpart. It employs satire to cast a critical eye on the global political landscape of the era, with a focus on the exaggerated presence of dictators.

The exaggerated depictions serve as a form of political satire, intended to critique and draw attention to the authoritarian regimes that were gaining power at the time. This artistic choice underscores the urgency and the heightened political concerns of the era, reflecting the widespread apprehension about the future course of international relations and the potential for global conflict.

In retrospect, this illustration gains additional significance when viewed through the lens of historical events that unfolded shortly thereafter. The years following the publication of this map saw the escalation of global tensions leading to the outbreak of World War II, validating the concerns expressed through this satirical artwork. The map thus serves as a prescient commentary on the political dynamics of its time, offering valuable insights into the era's cultural and political discourse.

The map illustrates the nature of governments based upon 3 types:

Dictatorial Control of the Agencies of Public Communication Varying Degrees of Control, Censorship and Intimidation Relative Freedom from Official Supervision The commentary below the map is instructive on its world view, identifying "ten adult bipeds, each equipped with distended ego and outsized adrenal glands, whose ten totaled brains wouldn't counterbalance that of one Einstein in the measurement of man's distance from the anthropoid ape."

Of note, Cotton has adapted and satirized Deal Carl Ackerman's contemporary "map of the black plague in the 20th Century" for this work. As noted by the PJ Mode Collection of Persuasive Cartography at Cornell University website description for this map:

A powerful satirical commentary on totalitarian control of speech from the first issue of Ken Magazine. "Caught here in all their peculiar beauty by the soul searching stylus of W. Cotton, Ken holds up for wonder the mangy motley pack of little 'strong men' who are now leading the world on a backward march to the Dark Ages. . . . In effect, over more than half the world, Liberty is now in totalitarian Eclipse." Each country is characterized by the degree of "dictatorial control" over communication. Each of the totalitarian leaders is named and shamed ("His Blood-red Loneliness, Nobody's Comrade, Stalin").

Ken was a controversial anti-fascist magazine, first published in April 1938. It was distinguished by unusual and powerful graphics like this one and a number of articles on the Spanish Civil War by Ernest Hemingway. The magazine failed in August 1939 as a result of wariness by advertisers and a boycott by the Catholic Church (Baptista 2009, 109-115).
Date
Source https://www.raremaps.com/gallery/detail/56686jc/carriers-of-the-new-black-plague-cotton
Author
William Cotton  (1880–1958)  wikidata:Q8007152
 
Alternative names
William Henry Cotton; Will Cotton
Description American caricaturist and painter
Date of birth/death 22 July 1880 Edit this at Wikidata 5 January 1958 Edit this at Wikidata
Location of birth/death Newport Edit this at Wikidata New Jersey Edit this at Wikidata
Authority file
creator QS:P170,Q8007152

Licensing

Public domain
This work is in the public domain because it was published in the United States between 1929 and 1963, and although there may or may not have been a copyright notice, the copyright was not renewed. For further explanation, see Commons:Hirtle chart and the copyright renewal logs.

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current17:18, 7 June 2020Thumbnail for version as of 17:18, 7 June 202012,473 × 7,911 (31.04 MB)BalkaniqueUploaded a work by William Henry Cotton from https://www.raremaps.com/gallery/detail/56686jc/carriers-of-the-new-black-plague-cotton with UploadWizard

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