| word looked up : | home / archive |
DoonesburyDoonesbury is a popular comic strip by Garry Trudeau. The title comes from the name of one of the main characters, Michael Doonesbury.Trudeau began publishing Doonesbury as a student at Yale University in 1968, where it appeared in the Yale Daily News as "Bull Tales". After being syndicated, Doonesbury became well known for its political content, usually liberal, always timely, and peppered with wry and ironic humor. It was a pioneer comic strip which blurred the distinction between editorial cartoon and the funny pages. President Gerald Ford acknowledged the stature of the comic strip saying "There are only three major vehicles to keep us informed as to what is going on in Washington: the electronic media, the print media, and Doonesbury". Doonesbury won a Pulitzer Prize in 1975 for Editorial Cartooning. The award was controversial in going to a comic strip artist, not a traditional editorial page cartoonist. Trudeau also delighted and intrigued readers by showing fluency with the jargons of many fields of American speech, from real estate brokers, to flight attendants, to computer nerds, to journalists, to presidential aides. Doonesbury delved into a number of political issues, causing controversies, and breaking new ground on the comics pages. Among the controversies and milestones:
Doonesbury has also taken the form of a stage show and an animated special. The strip was not published during the period January 1983 through September 1984.
A typical Doonesbury strip: November 18, 2001 Sunday strip, which shows no faces or characters, just bubbles above the White House, a man, presumably Karl Rove, says: 'Sir, you've been so busy this fall, we didn't have a chance to brief you on this...'
People and things inspiring characters in Doonesbury
Characters:
External Links: It was doubtless imported by the Phoenicians, the
Von Koban im Laude der Osseten," Berlin, 1883.
[263] -- This idea gains probability from the fact that the remains
suppose belonged to Priam.
[264] -- The gold.html">gold may have come from the mines of Astyra, not far
to an alloy of gold and silver, the yellow color of which resembles
objects. See "Troy and its Remains," Figs. 174 to 497, pp. 260 to 353.
[267] -- The qr'hdemnon or diadem of the wife of Menelaus is a
alternating with small leaves.html">leaves, and ending in rather larger leaves,
characteristic of Trojan art. The golden objects are all soldered
Tiryns, which we believe to have been contemporary with Troy, the art
vol. xiii., plates 1 and 2.
[269] -- If we accept 1200 B.C. as the date of the Trojan war and
that succeeded each other on the hill of Hissarlik only lasted four
happiness or good-fortune.
[271] -- Comte Goblet d'Auriella, BUL. ACAD. ROYALE DE BELGIQUE, 1889.html">1889.
[272] -- G. Atkinson, CONGRES PREHISTORIQUE, Lisbon, 1880, p. 466.
[273] -- "Ages Prehistoriques en Espagne et Portugal," figs 410, 411,
KUNDE, 1884. Musoeon, 1888 and 1889.
[275] -- Virchow, who visited the remains at Hissarlik, treats this
excellent essay on the subject was read by the explorers, MM. de
and "Les Fouilles de Spy," by Dr. Collignon, published in the REVUE
carried on in the same cave in 1879 by M. Bucquoy (BUL. SOC. ANTH. DE
some flints of the Mousterien type, and even some Chelleen. All is still licensed under the GNU FDL.
|
|
|||||