The controversy surrounding Serena Williams’s outburst after being penalised by chair umpire Carlos Ramos in the US Open final has prompted hundred of articles and arguments online. But while most publications argued whether the umpire was justified or Serena, and opined on the gender and power dynamics, Australian publication Herald Sun decided to go ahead with a cartoon that had both racist and sexist undertones.
The caricature by Mark Knight shows a butch and fat-lipped Williams jumping up and down on her broken racket at the US Open. The umpire is seen saying “can’t you just let her win?” to the opponent, who would be the eventual champion Naomi Osaka, but is instead portrayed as a petite, blonde girl. Osaka is a 20-year-old player of Japanese and Haitian decent, a fact the cartoonist chose to ignore for some reason.
My toon in today’s @theheraldsun on #SerenaWilliams @usopen pic.twitter.com/didwtQg1R5
— Mark Knight (@Knightcartoons) September 10, 2018
Knight, who has a reputation for controversial cartoons, was slammed across social media, including by author JK Rowling, a member of the US Congress, and about the 30,00 people who commented on his post.
Knight responded to the criticism by pointing out that he had drawn an unflattering portrayal of Australian male tennis star Nick Kyrgios “behaving badly”. “Don’t bring gender into it when it’s all about behaviour,” he said.
However, the racist undertones of his drawing, both in the portrayal of Serena and the whitewashing of Osaka, was rightly criticised by a large section of people on Twitter. Here’s what being said about why the cartoon was intensive and unfair to both competitors
Well done on reducing one of the greatest sportswomen alive to racist and sexist tropes and turning a second great sportswoman into a faceless prop. https://t.co/YOxVMuTXEC
— J.K. Rowling (@jk_rowling) September 10, 2018
A cartoon in The Herald Sun (an Australian news paper) depicts Serena Williams as a giant baby with a huge nose and lips, and Naomi Osaka as a blonde white girl. Y'all are really telling on yourselves, huh? pic.twitter.com/hweOX2M9ZP
— cardi b's flying shoe (@mannyfidel) September 10, 2018
Whatever you think of the Serena Williams situation, I think we can all agree that this cartoon is disgusting. Erasing Naomi Osaka’s blackness alongside a grossly racialised caricature of Serena, invoking racist stereotypes, is obscene. https://t.co/Z09T7rt5tt
— Anna Kessel (@Anna_Kessel) September 10, 2018
This obviously isn’t the most offensive aspect of the the Serena Williams cartoon but: if it isn’t sexist or racist then why is Naomi Osaka, who is Japanese and Haitian, portrayed as a white woman with a blonde ponytail? pic.twitter.com/TpFGyMBJuE
— Katy Stoll (@katystoll) September 10, 2018
A perfect example of the racism and sexism @serenawilliams dealt with at the US Open Final and that other women of color deal with everyday. Is this what you mean to portray @Knightcartoons ?? https://t.co/7eXDVeJBgj
— Sunny Hostin (@sunny) September 10, 2018
For all the virtue signalers grasping for a legitimate "racist" inaccuracy in the Serena cartoon who have latched onto Osaka being depicted as a "blonde," did you people even watch the freaking match?!! pic.twitter.com/pdxW8ZjGui
— John Ziegler (@Zigmanfreud) September 11, 2018
1. #SerenaWilliams does not look like this.
— Ryan Knight 🌊 (@ProudResister) September 10, 2018
(Serena is beautiful)
2. @SerenaWilliams did not act like this.
(Serena stood up for herself)
3. @Naomi_Osaka_ does not look like this.
(Naomi is not blonde or white)
This is the most racist and sexist cartoon that I have ever seen. https://t.co/qlIi59rAL8
Just saw that unbelievably racist Australian cartoon re Serena Williams & Naomi Osaka. (I will not dignify it with a retweet.) If you can't see the nauseating, horrifically obvious racism of it, you don't *want* to see it. And you are the problem.
— N. K. Jemisin (@nkjemisin) September 10, 2018
That serena cartoon legit looks like something out of an 1870s racist southern newspaper
— Adam Serwer 🍝 (@AdamSerwer) September 10, 2018
Why do we object to the Serena Williams cartoon charicature?
— Jillian Hurley (@BeautyBind) September 10, 2018
Because dehumanizing African Americans is a time honored tool to hinder equality in America through “humor.”
Thread #TriggerWarning #SerenaWilliams https://t.co/beGSeOnW9b pic.twitter.com/js0HPbECSM
With inputs from AFP