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Cartoon criticising mothers’ use of Instagram and social media sparks backlash

Controversial cartoonist Michael Leunig has been accused of unfairly judging mothers in a cartoon that suggested some love their phones and Instagram more than their children.

The cartoon, published in Melbourne’s The Age newspaper on Wednesday, showed a mother reading her phone as she pushed an empty pram while an infant lay on the ground behind her.

A four-line poem accompanying the cartoon said the mother was “busy on Instagram” when her baby had fallen from the pram “unseen and alone, wishing that he was loved like a phone”.

Feminist author Clementine Ford said Leunig’s cartoon amounted to “condescending judgment” and labelled him a “f—ing gronk”.

“I bet you never spent hours walking babies around in a pram, feeling isolated and alone and terrified,” she wrote in a tweet, which has been retweeted more than 400 times and attracted more than 3500 likes.

She wrote that a lot of her time spent on her phone as a mother was for work and connecting with other mothers for support.

“But actually, none of those reasons are any of your f—ing business. If a woman is on her phone and pushing a pram, it’s nothing to do with you.”

Others took to Twitter to “fix” the cartoon or post artistic responses of their own.

The ABC has contacted Leunig to invite him to respond.

Two readers of The Age took to its opinion pages on Thursday to protest the cartoon.

“See Leunig has another ‘bad mummy’ cartoon,” Margaret Brennan wrote.

“Leunig, every so often your misogyny creeps out. You can’t help yourself, can you?” Kath McKay said.

It is not the first time Leunig’s cartoons – which often offer whimsical reflections on the modernisation of society – have courted controversy.

He has previously produced cartoons challenging the science behind vaccinations, including a 2015 cartoon that depicted a mother pushing her baby away from a volley of syringes raining down from the sky.

Michael Leunig cartoon mothers
It’s not the first time the cartoonist’s work has caused controversy. Photo: ABC

In 2015, Leunig told the ABC he and his family had received death threats amid the backlash to the cartoon.

“‘The belligerence of the pro-vaccination is quite surprising,” he said.

“So belligerent, so angry, that one isn’t marching with the regiment. It bothers me to see the mob being so oppressive to such people.”

The post Cartoon criticising mothers’ use of Instagram and social media sparks backlash appeared first on The New Daily.


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