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  1. Dec 7, 2020 · Cartoons like these negatively linked suffrage for Black Americans with women’s suffrage, and used the supposed absurdity of Black people and women voting to make jokes or prophesy the certain downfall of the nation if such people were allowed to participate in politics.

  2. By Anna Diamond. Published Aug. 14, 2020 Updated Aug. 19, 2020. When Alice Paul recruited a cartoonist for her newspaper The Suffragist in 1914, the idea of that activist was already sketched in...

  3. This special installation from the Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History looks at three civil rights comic books designed to teach children and adults about Black history, non-violent protest, and voting power.

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  5. Jun 5, 2020 · Published Jun 5, 2020. Black creators are thriving in the creator-owned comics scene, and comics like Bitter Root, Prince of Cats and The Wilds are must-read titles.

    • Freelance Writer
  6. Dec 6, 2016 · In his Negro Drawings and illustrations for books by W.C. Handy, Langston Hughes, and Zora Neale Hurston, Covarrubias exploded Black bodies and personalities to comic proportions.

  7. Nov 6, 2018 · While comic books might be considered frivolous, the Montgomery comic served as a tool to teach nonviolent resistance, according to the Rev. James Lawson of the Fellowship of Reconciliation, the group that published the comic.

  8. By Joshua H. Stulman. Black characters in comics have existed since the very foundation of the industry. However, the depictions of black characters in comics have grown along with pop culture. Black characters originally served two purposes in golden age comics. The first purpose was as comic relief (and many times racial comedic relief).

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