Caricatures of Violence

Quantitative Data

The following charts display quantitative data on themes in La Caricature. More detailed information about each chart can be found my mousing over the image. Note that some images were missing data or were difficult to code. See this page for a discussion of methodological challenges faced while coding these images. 

The key takeaways from quantitative data include:

  • When women are represented (which is infrequent) they are often allegorical figures, not real people.
  • Marianne is the most frequently depicted woman in La Caricature and she is a victim of violence more often than she is not.
  • In private, interior spaces, images with women outnumber those without, indicating a connection between domesticity and femininity.
  • In crowds of ten or more, there are rarely more than three women - their representation in La Caricture is nowhere near proportional to their participation in public life.

The first chart shows how many total images include women and how many of those women are allegorical figures. The total area of the chart represents all of the images that I examined. The area of the gray portion represents the 242 images that did not include women. The combined area of the green rectangles represents all of the images with women. The dark green portion represents images with allegorical women and the light green portion represents images with non-allegorical women.

The second chart examines which women are being victimized in representations of gendered violence. The total area of the chart represents all images that were coded as including women. The light gray section represents images that include non-allegorical women and no gendered violence. The dark gray section represents images that depict violence against non-allegorical women. The light blue section represents images with allegorical women (not including Marianne) and no gendered violence. The dark blue section represents images of violence against allegorical women (not including Marianne). The red sections represent images including Marianne - the larger, darker red section represents images in which she is the victim of violence. 
 

Key takeaways from these two charts:

The graph below represents trends over time in the representation of women and violence against women. The blue line represents the total number of images of women. The red line represents the total number of images that depict violence against women.

The following bar chart shows the settings in which women were represented in caricature. The height of bar represents the total number of images depicting a certain setting. The red section represents the total number of images that represent women in each particular setting. The gray portions represent the total number of images in each setting that do not include women.
 

Key takeaways from these two charts:
The following bar graphs examine women’s representation in images with different amounts of people. Images were coded as depicting no figures, a single figure, a group of figures (2-10), or a crowd (over 10).

The first graph shows what portion of total images that fall under each category include women. The second graph shows the average number of female figures depicted in images in each category.
 

Key takeaways from these two charts:                         
 

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