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・ The Mondrians (album)
・ The Money
・ The Modern Jazz Quartet and the Oscar Peterson Trio at the Opera House
・ The Modern Jazz Quartet at Music Inn
・ The Modern Jazz Quartet at Music Inn Volume 2
・ The Modern Jazz Quartet Plays George Gershwin's Porgy and Bess
・ The Modern Jazz Quartet Plays No Sun in Venice
・ The Modern Jewish Girl's Guide to Guilt
・ The Modern Jukebox Collection
・ The Modern Language Journal
・ The Modern Lovers
・ The Modern Lovers (album)
・ The Modern Parents
・ The Modern Project
・ The Modern Reader's Japanese-English Character Dictionary
The Modern Samson
・ The Modern Schoolman
・ The Modern Sinner Nervous Man
・ The Modern Sound of Betty Carter
・ The Modern Sound of Mr. B
・ The Modern Sounds of the Knitters
・ The Modern Theatre Is the Epic Theatre
・ The Modern Touch
・ The Modern Tribe
・ The Modern World
・ The Modern World (novel)
・ The Modernaires
・ The Moderne
・ The Modernista
・ The Moderns


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The Modern Samson : ウィキペディア英語版
The Modern Samson
The Modern Samson is an influential political cartoon drawn by cartoonist Thomas Nast. It originally appeared on Page 632 of the October 3rd Issue of ''Harpers Weekly'' in 1868.
==Details==
The first Reconstruction Act was in March 1867; one of the stipulations for the eleven former Confederate states to regain Congressional representation in the union was the requirement of black manhood suffrage. Three states would not conform until 1870 when the Fifteenth Amendment constitutionally required them to comply.
The Modern Samson is a parody of the biblical story of Samson, and implies that voting rights (shown as Samson's hair) is a strength of black men that the opposing Democrats (shown as Delilah) strive to keep them from. Nast shared the views of the Republicans who considered equality in politics to be integral in economic and cultural advancement.
The caricatures of armed Democratic figures include (from left to right): Wade Hampton III with a torch held high; Nathan Bedford Forrest with a Fort Pillow Medallion; Robert E. Lee squatting; presidential nominee Horatio Seymour with hair shaped into horns, wearing a Ku Klux Klan breastplate, and carrying a flag that promotes slavery, the "lost cause" (the Confederacy), American Civil War draft riots of New York City, the Ku Klux Klan, and the Reconstruction race riots in Memphis and New Orleans; wearing another Ku Klux Klan breastplate, former Confederate Rear Admiral Raphael Semmes; and 23rd New York Governor John Hoffman with a generic Catholic Irish-American under his arm. On the far right, a statue of President Andrew Johnson is likened to a "Moses" of the black Americans holding a tablet labeled "veto" to remind the audience of his recent Reconstruction legislation veto. Under the statue is a snake with horns similar to the hair of the depiction of Seymour, alluding to Satan. Opposite, on the left, a bonfire is depicted in front of them burning the Bible as well as various symbols of knowledge including books, a scroll, and a globe.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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