Newspaper cartoonists: Drawing on women’s lives

Newspaper cartoonists: Drawing on women’s lives

From The Conversation by BBC World Service

April 27, 2026 · 26 min

About this episode

This episode explores how female perspectives shape newspaper cartooning through the experiences of Andrea Arroyo and Sarah Akinterinwa.

Newspaper cartooning has a long history of using satire and humour to provide social commentary on the issues of the day – but how do female perspectives inform the approach, themes and tone of newspaper cartooning? Andrea Arroyo is from Mexico City. Her work as a dancer took her to New York in the early eighties. In the US, an exhibition of her visual art was picked up to feature in the New York Times and spawned a career as a newspaper cartoonist. Her influence as a dancer can be seen in her rhythmic, fluid line work. Her artwork about the Me Too movement won a United Nations award for Political Cartooning. Sarah Akinterinwa is from Kent in the UK. During the Covid-19 pandemic, she created a comic about a millennial couple called Oyin and Kojo, hoping to create better representation of Black British people in cartoons. After posting a daily drawing to social media, the cartoon editor of the New Yorker discovered her work and asked her to become a contributor. Sarah is also a cartoonist at The Guardian. Her strips tackle women’s issues, gender dynamics, friendships, relationships, health and politics. Produced by Elena Angelides and Jane Thurlow (Image: (L) Sarah Akinterinwa…

People in this episode

Guests: Andrea Arroyo, Sarah Akinterinwa

Topics covered

  • newspaper cartooning
  • women's perspectives
  • social commentary
  • Me Too movement
  • representation
  • gender dynamics

Keywords

  • cartooning
  • satire
  • humour
  • women's issues
  • Black British representation
  • Me Too
  • art

Mentioned in this episode

Organizations: New York Times, New Yorker, The Guardian, United Nations

Places: Mexico City, Kent, New York

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