单词 | Thomas Nast |
例句 | He starts things off with the 19th-century cartoonist Thomas Nast, who popularized Santa Claus and Uncle Sam on his way to deploying his “Tammany Tiger” to take down Boss Tweed’s political machine. A Sweeping History of American Comics 2021-11-16T05:00:00Z It reminds us that, whether we are talking about Thomas Nast or Stephen Colbert, Mark Twain’s observation will always hold: “Against the assault of laughter, nothing can stand.” Books of The Times: ‘The Art of Controversy’ by Victor Navasky 2013-05-23T21:40:02Z In 1870, political cartoonist Thomas Nast used the donkey to refer to the Democratic Party. Campaign 2016: Understanding the presidential election 2016-01-26T05:00:00Z But Santa had been portrayed almost exclusively in red from the early 19th century and most of his modern image was put together by cartoonist Thomas Nast in the 1870s. Coca-Cola didn’t invent Santa ... the 10 biggest Christmas myths debunked 2016-12-21T05:00:00Z Stylistically, Hull’s trashy mannequins and their cracked demeanor cross Edward Kienholz sculptures, Philip Guston paintings and 19th century Thomas Nast editorial cartoons. A Klansman with a megaphone: Steven Hull's sordid art laments troubled times 2017-03-21T04:00:00Z Thomas Nast might weep — or laugh out loud. In the galleries: Trump in poncho and sombrero, Clinton as a suffragette 2016-10-21T04:00:00Z He alights on key moments, like the Thomas Nast caricatures of Boss Tweed in the 1870s that helped bring the Tammany Hall politician down. Books of The Times: ‘The Art of Controversy’ by Victor Navasky 2013-05-23T21:40:02Z And not just to those of Thomas Nast, but to the older Dutch engravings of Sinterklaas, or St. Nicholas. John Cuneo’s “Santa’s Little Helpers” 2018-12-10T05:00:00Z The political cartoonist Thomas Nast did the drawings for the first edition of Clement C. Moore’s “A Visit From St. Nicholas,” giving Santa the jolly form he still has today. ‘One Hundred Books Famous in Children’s Literature’ at Grolier 2014-12-25T05:00:00Z Starting with the 19th-century political cartoons of Thomas Nast, it traces the boom in newspaper comics, the advent of comic books, underground comics, fan culture, and finally graphic novels and web comics. 11 New Books We Recommend This Week 2021-12-02T05:00:00Z There’s a rich history of editorial cartooning, including Thomas Nast’s vivid takedowns of corrupt New York City politicians in the late 1800s and Herbert Block’s drawings of a sinister-looking Richard Nixon in The Washington Post. Editorial cartoonists’ firings point to steady decline of opinion pages in newspapers 2023-07-16T04:00:00Z In 1864, famed political cartoonist Thomas Nast portrayed Abraham Lincoln as an ape, this just seven years after the publication of Charles Darwin’s “On the Origin of Species.” Kevin McCarthy and Tucker Carlson’s unholy alliance 2023-03-20T04:00:00Z Yet Crumb is perhaps most directly indebted to the 19th-century political cartoonist Thomas Nast, who helped bring down Tammany Hall and New York’s Boss Tweed political machine. R. Crumb Means Some Offense 2022-09-15T04:00:00Z One of the most effective critics of “Boss Tweed” and Tammany Hall in the 19th century was Thomas Nast, the cartoonist. Opinion | To Beat Trump, Mock Him 2020-09-26T04:00:00Z Thomas Nast, the brilliant editorial cartoonist, working later in Harper’s Weekly — self-styled Journal of Civilization, as its banner read — mocked the California court’s decision in People v. Column: It's time to chop down the 'lynching tree' from this California city's logo 2020-07-30T04:00:00Z The Trumps act like cartoon plutocrats straight out of a Thomas Nast drawing. Opinion | Trump vowed never to forget the ‘forgotten men and women.’ He just did. 2020-05-12T04:00:00Z Though it is a common misconception that the word “nasty” derives from the work of Thomas Nast, who is considered the father of American political cartooning, the myth did ring true. Opinion | Sadly, political cartooning is becoming a lost art 2019-07-31T04:00:00Z “It reminded me of a Thomas Nast cartoon, when he pictured the Tweed ring, the boss of New York,’’ said Bill Mullins, author of “Becoming Big League: Seattle, the Pilots, and Stadium Politics.” It was a one-season roller coaster ride at Sicks’ Stadium. 50 years later, the Pilots remain Seattle’s fun fascination. 2019-06-21T04:00:00Z He is a caricature out of Thomas Nast, the 19th-century political cartoonist. Opinion | Which side of the wall of decency are you on? 2019-01-07T05:00:00Z If Thomas Nast were alive, he might draw the party animal as a 6-foot-3 lumbering creature with a flowing orange mane, a beast uncivilized but cunning. Opinion | Goodbye, Republican Party. Hello, Bigfoot Party. 2018-07-31T04:00:00Z She is following caricaturists from Thomas Nast to Al Hirschfeld who have given their subjects chins that were wider than wide, cheeks that were more jowly than jolly and eyebrows that were longer than long. An Iranian Caricaturist Got a Visa Despite the Travel Ban. Now She’s Drawing Trump. 2018-07-22T04:00:00Z The so-called Tammany Tiger, created by famed cartoonist Thomas Nast, symbolized what Nast regarded as the rapaciousness of the New York machine. The National Zoo gets the purrfect resident: A 310-pound tiger 2018-01-05T05:00:00Z And before that, Thomas Nast drew Santa for Harper’s Weekly with his traditional red coat, white beard, round belly and pipe. Perspective | Five myths about Saint Nicholas 2017-12-21T05:00:00Z Santa’s image was developed in popular paintings by artists like Thomas Nast and Norman Rockwell. The ‘Christmas Freak’ of Fifth Avenue 2017-12-14T05:00:00Z The cartoonist Thomas Nast literally drew her as the Devil. The Dream — and the Myth — of the ‘Women’s Vote’ 2016-11-15T05:00:00Z Thomas Nast popularised the image in a cartoon in a 1874 edition of Harper's Weekly, as pro-Democrat newspapers were accusing the Republican president of Caesarism for allegedly seeking a third term in office. US election glossary: A-Z guide to political jargon - BBC News 2016-09-20T04:00:00Z These political mascots first appeared in the 1800s, popularized by the cartoonist Thomas Nast. New York Today: A Convention Begins 2016-07-18T04:00:00Z Thomas Nast, the cartoonist who gave us the donkey as a symbol for Democrats and the elephant for Republicans, made Uncle Sam’s goatee famous. Your Friday Briefing 2015-09-11T04:00:00Z Political cartoonists like Thomas Nast depicted the Irish as apes and Catholic bishops as monsters; “No Irish Need Apply” signs appeared in shop windows. To teach only 'American exceptionalism' is to ignore half the country's story | James Nevius 2015-08-03T04:00:00Z Objects like hand-colored lithographs created by Currier & Ives, and an editorial cartoon by Thomas Nast in 1872 from Harper’s Weekly, about Ulysses S. Grant, are examples of this transition. The Changing Imagery of U.S. Presidents: ‘From Portraits to Tweets’ Is On View in Hempstead 2015-03-13T04:00:00Z New York cartoonist Thomas Nast, a radical Republican, later also used the donkey to represent a group of northern anti-civil war Democrats, and more generally as a symbol for pro-Democrat editors and newspapers. US election glossary: A-Z guide to political jargon - BBC News 2016-09-20T04:00:00Z The destructive elephant was introduced four decades later — 140 years ago today — by the cartoonist Thomas Nast in Harper’s Weekly, in connection with a Republican effort to nominate Ulysses Grant for a third term. Latest News: Obama and Boehner, Same-Sex Marriage, Navy SEALs 2014-11-07T05:00:00Z Cartoonist Thomas Nast skewered the bosses of New York’s Tammany Hall in the late 19th century, and humorists such as Mark Twain and Will Rogers made “poking fun at a Congress . . . a time-honored American Pastime.” A funny thing happened on the way to the ballot box The satirical cartoons by Thomas Nast and Thomas Rowlandson may not quite match the “King Tut” of Steve Martin for sheer zaniness. | Connecticut: A Review of ‘Echoes of Egypt’ Exhibition, at Yale Peabody Museum 2013-07-06T00:36:11Z A very famous political cartoonist named Thomas Nast is credited with making these animals the symbols of their parties during the 1870s. Famous cartoonist made donkey and elephant the symbols of political parties 2012-01-27T16:09:21Z Few readers need to be informed that it was the war which developed and brought to light the caricaturist of the United States, Thomas Nast. Caricature and Other Comic Art in all Times and many Lands. 2012-04-04T02:00:59.277Z I glow, too, under the conviction that correspondence courses can transform me into a trained nurse, an O. Henry, a Thomas Nast. The Unpopular Review, Number 19 July-December 1918 2012-01-09T03:00:24.167Z Another charming publication of Mr. Nast was brought out by the Harper Brothers for Christmas, 1889, under the title of "Thomas Nast's Christmas Drawings for the Human Race". Authors and Writers Associated with Morristown With a Chapter on Historic Morristown 2011-10-25T02:00:25.713Z The caricatures themselves, with the exception of those drawn by Thomas Nast, show little improvement over the caricatures which were executed during the Civil War. The History of the Nineteenth Century in Caricature 2011-10-04T02:00:18.533Z I remember hearing Thomas Nast talk about him very enthusiastically after returning from a visit to him in Washington. McClure's Magazine, Vol. 1, No. 1 2011-07-17T02:00:36.813Z The Little Dinner to Osgood When Osgood went to London as an agent of the Harpers, some of us gave him a farewell dinner, for which Thomas Nast designed the menu cards. Recollections of a Varied Life 2011-07-14T02:00:11.837Z There's no better symbol of the transformation of Northern abolitionist sentiment than the work of cartoonist Thomas Nast: The pro-Union Harper's artist once graphically depicted the perfidy of Confederates and championed civil rights for slaves. Everything you know about the Civil War is wrong 2011-06-09T13:01:00Z It is said by a contemporary writer that "in the particular line of pictorial satire, Thomas Nast stands in the foremost rank." Authors and Writers Associated with Morristown With a Chapter on Historic Morristown 2011-10-25T02:00:25.713Z Gilded Age New Yorkers either cheered or fumed at the political savagery in the drawings of Thomas Nast. | Westchester: A Visual Narrative of Old England, Rude, Lewd and Colorful 2011-05-15T01:23:57Z He was like a Thomas Nast cartoon of a right-wing thug: Overweight, bombastic and given to hysterical rants. It's time for Obama to pull a Clinton 2010-10-10T15:01:00Z The name of Thomas Nast overshadows and sums up American political caricature. Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 5, Slice 3 "Capefigue" to "Carneades" At the Union League Club I met Mr. Rufus E. Shapley, who kindly gave me a copy of his clever and witty political satire, “Solid for Mulhooly,” illustrated 273 by Mr. Thomas Nast. A Frenchman in America Recollections of Men and Things Perhaps you know that later on he became the Thomas Nast of the corn belt—one of the few cartoonists with a really definite influence and a loyal following. News Writing The Gathering , Handling and Writing of News Stories His verbal descriptions enabled Thomas Nast to paint his famous picture of Lincoln in Richmond. Charles Carleton Coffin War Correspondent, Traveller, Author, and Statesman A Mark Twain autograph letter brought $43 yesterday at the auction by the Merwin-Clayton Company of the library and correspondence of the late Thomas Nast, cartoonist. Chapters from My Autobiography Thomas Nast died there of it within a month after he landed. The Red One At four o’clock, Mr. Thomas Nast, the celebrated caricaturist, called. A Frenchman in America Recollections of Men and Things The New York Times and the cartoons of Thomas Nast in Harper's Weekly were the chief agents in arousing the people of the city to their situation. The United States Since the Civil War Thomas Nast, America's great cartoonist of those days, drew a cartoon of the two men together. Theodore Roosevelt General Grant had defeated Horace Greeley, a result, in some measure at least, attributed to the amusing and powerful pictures of the cartoonist, Thomas Nast. Mark Twain's Letters — Volume 2 (1867-1875) There were two attacking parties, however, who did not wait for proofs—Thomas Nast, the brilliant cartoonist of Harper's Weekly, and the New York Times. The Boss and the Machine; a chronicle of the politicians and party organization |
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