ABSTRACT

First Published in 1992. `Between the wars' was the great age of the cartoon character. The adventures of Mickey Mouse, Popeye, and Donald Duck were followed avidly by millions. Even the political leaders of the grim world of the 1920s and 1930s were known to millions as cartoon characters - gawky, bespectacled Woodrow Wilson, the balloon-like Mussolini, and the moustache men Hitler, Stalin, Neville Chamberlain and Ramsay MacDonald.
Comic, mordant, and irreverent, political cartoons reveal more about popular concerns in the world of the slump, of rising nationalism and aggression, than either official documents or the work of most journalists. Published in newspapers or magazines with a wide circulation, they `made sense' to the ordinary reader. More than half a century on, that sense of immediate identification has been lost, and political cartoons of the period now need detailed explanation.
Roy Douglas, author of the acclaimed The World War: The Cartoonist's Vision, now applies the same skills to the interwar period. His scope is international, and he has selected his cartoons from many different countries. Douglas covers all the great political and social issues of the period as they revealed themselves through the cartoonist's eyes. His greatest gift is for concise, clear explanation, setting each cartoon into its historical context.
Throughout this book it is easy to trace the decay of hope in the 1920s, through the fear of war in the 1930s, to the determination at its end that fascism `must be stopped'. These cartoons, intended for the man and woman `in the street', in Europe, North America, in the Soviet Union and in Asia mirror their changing attitudes and beliefs, as their nations shaped up for war.

chapter 1|23 pages

They make a wilderness … 1918–20

chapter 2|24 pages

Revolution, 1917–21

chapter 3|11 pages

Mediterranean problems, 1919–23

chapter 4|18 pages

Reparations, 1919–25

chapter 5|10 pages

Hope, 1924

chapter 6|18 pages

Stability, 1925–9

chapter 7|19 pages

The Great Depression begins, 1929–31

chapter 9|27 pages

The Nazi rise to power, 1923–33

chapter 10|10 pages

Japan, 1921–33

chapter 11|22 pages

A time of conferences, 1925–33

chapter 12|22 pages

Setting the scene, 1933–4

chapter 13|12 pages

The end of the old order, 1935

chapter 14|10 pages

Abyssinia, 1935–6

chapter 15|9 pages

The Rhineland, 1936

chapter 16|14 pages

Spain and the triumph of ideology, 1936–9

chapter 17|21 pages

Problems of foreign policy, 1936–8

chapter 18|14 pages

Italy, Germany and Austria, 1937–8

chapter 19|17 pages

Czechoslovakia, 1938

chapter 20|15 pages

Aftermath to Munich, 1938–9

chapter 21|13 pages

The road to war, March–September 1939

chapter 22|4 pages

Reflections