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“Happy Independence Day” Mattie Gibson. What do you see?

Date post: 03-Jan-2016
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“Happy Independence Day” Mattie Gibson
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Page 1: “Happy Independence Day” Mattie Gibson. What do you see?

“Happy Independence Day”

Mattie Gibson

Page 2: “Happy Independence Day” Mattie Gibson. What do you see?

What do you see?

Page 3: “Happy Independence Day” Mattie Gibson. What do you see?

• The first thing I saw in the cartoon was the Oil container. Then I followed the chain that leads to the man saying “Happy Independence Day”. The man is wearing American. His expression is helpless. His hand is reaching out as if trying to get help.

Page 4: “Happy Independence Day” Mattie Gibson. What do you see?

Why is the Oil container bigger than the man?

Page 5: “Happy Independence Day” Mattie Gibson. What do you see?

• America is dependent on oil. So the oil is a large part of our lives. The container dominates the picture, as if it was more important than the man.

Page 6: “Happy Independence Day” Mattie Gibson. What do you see?

Point of view

Page 7: “Happy Independence Day” Mattie Gibson. What do you see?

• The image is seen from someone who does not agree with using foreign oil. They believe that it only makes America more dependent on other countries.

Page 8: “Happy Independence Day” Mattie Gibson. What do you see?

Why is the man chained?

Page 9: “Happy Independence Day” Mattie Gibson. What do you see?

• The man is chained to the oil because America needs oil. Americas are not truly independent because we still rely foreign products, such as oil.

Page 10: “Happy Independence Day” Mattie Gibson. What do you see?

Font

Page 11: “Happy Independence Day” Mattie Gibson. What do you see?

• The words “Happy Independence Day” all have different font types. This represents Americans’ different views on the using foreign oil.

Page 12: “Happy Independence Day” Mattie Gibson. What do you see?

What does the lighting effect?

Page 13: “Happy Independence Day” Mattie Gibson. What do you see?

• The light is brighter around the man. It is darker around the oil can. This adds the good guy, bad guy effect. The darker light would be like the antagonist side, and the bright light would be like the protagonist side.

Page 14: “Happy Independence Day” Mattie Gibson. What do you see?

Audience

Page 15: “Happy Independence Day” Mattie Gibson. What do you see?

• The cartoon would be meant for Americans. It would not be for political figures alone because America is a democracy. Therefore, all the people would need to see this.

Page 16: “Happy Independence Day” Mattie Gibson. What do you see?

Logos

Page 17: “Happy Independence Day” Mattie Gibson. What do you see?

• The argument tin the picture is a “logical argument”. Americans are still ,in a way, largely dependent on other nations. Therefore, America is enslaved by the necessity of foreign oil. If we were to use our own oil, than the man saying Happy Independence Day could really celebrate it.

Page 18: “Happy Independence Day” Mattie Gibson. What do you see?

Ethos

Page 19: “Happy Independence Day” Mattie Gibson. What do you see?

• According to http://maps.unomaha.edu/peterson/funda/sidebar/oilconsumption.html the U.S. imports about oil from countries such as Canada, Saudi Arabia, Venezuela, and Mexico. If we used our own oil instead of buying oil from other countries, we could have 13 million dollars per hour(13 million dollars is paid every hour for oil according to the National Resources Defense Council).

Page 20: “Happy Independence Day” Mattie Gibson. What do you see?

Pathos

Page 21: “Happy Independence Day” Mattie Gibson. What do you see?

• Using foreign oil takes a lot of money form the U.S. We could make jobs because people would have to drill the oil. The money saved could go towards paying off our huge debt, to further guarantee our true freedom as Americans so the next generations do not have to grow up depending on foreign countries as much as past generations have.

Page 22: “Happy Independence Day” Mattie Gibson. What do you see?

Source

• http://eharpe001.blogspot.com/2008/09/observation-selecting-visual-rhetoric.html

Page 23: “Happy Independence Day” Mattie Gibson. What do you see?

Background

• Title: Happy Independence Day• Time period: unknown• Artist: Jim Morin• Published: The Miami Herald• Historical Content: America’s true freedom


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