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Is It Possible To Draw Serena Williams Without Being Racist?

Marker Knight, the Australian cartoonist who came under fire for his depiction of Serena Williams as a racist stereotype, has responded to the outrage. He insists that his cartoon wasn't about race, only about Williams' behavior during her confrontation with umpire Carlos Ramos during the U.South. Open final.

'The globe has gone crazy'

Knight did an interview on Monday night and defended his maligned drawing.

"There'southward nothing inaccurate in the drawing, simply I'thousand distressing information technology's being taken by social media and distorted so much," he said.

"The cartoon is most Serena, information technology was near her poor behavior. Information technology had aught to do with race."

Of course, one might ask if the cartoon had zip to do with race, why he felt the demand to draw Williams in a way that recalls the cartoons of Jack Johnson or cartoons of the Jim Crow due south. Knight dismissed the criticism that his cartoon mimicked racist cartoons of the past, and defended his extremely exaggerated depiction of Serena's features.

"People said I'm a racist because I drew Serena as an African American woman," Knight explained. "I drew her as this powerful figure, which she is, she'south strongly built. They say I'grand racist because I drew Naomi Osaka in the groundwork with blonde hair. Well, she does have her hair dyed blonde."

<span>Serena Williams had a confrontation with umpire Carlos Ramos at the U.Due south. Open up final, which inspired Marking Knight'south cartoon</span>. (Photo by Tim Clayton/Corbis via Getty Images)

Serena Williams had a confrontation with umpire Carlos Ramos at the U.S. Open final, which inspired Marker Knight's cartoon. (Photo by Tim Clayton/Corbis via Getty Images)

Knight told the interviewer that "the world has gone crazy," and said that his wife and children were threatened on Instagram. He went on to complaining that no 1 is immune to "dial downward" in their criticisms anymore.

"I think these days, I don't think you can, information technology's called punching downward," he said. "You tin't punch down these days. And what that means is you tin't criticize minority groups for poor behavior. Y'all just can't get there. But I'one thousand a cartoonist and I annotate on all topics."

The controversial cartoon

Knight drew the cartoon afterwards watching Williams' outburst at the U.Due south. Open finals, and information technology was published in the Australian paper the Herald Sunday on Monday. Knight posted the cartoon on his Twitter account.

Mark Knight posted the cartoon he drew about Serena Williams on his Twitter account on Monday. (Twitter)

Mark Knight posted the cartoon he drew about Serena Williams on his Twitter account on Monday. (Twitter)

The backlash was immediate, with people calling out the cartoon for being racist and employing stereotypes to dehumanize Williams.

Knight deleted his Twitter account on Monday.

– – – – – –

Liz Roscher is a writer for Yahoo Sports. Have a tip? Email her at lizroscher@yahoo.com or follow her on Twitter at @lizroscher.

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Source: https://sports.yahoo.com/cartoonist-defends-depiction-serena-williams-nothing-race-144344924.html

Posted by: schmidtlonst2001.blogspot.com

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