%0 Journal Article %A First, Let Me Feel Your Finger %T Anthropophagy and anthropomorphism: constructing ‘Post-Colonial Cannibal’ %D 2011 %J Animation Practice, Process & Production, %V 1 %N 1 %P 155-168 %@ 2042-7883 %R https://doi.org/10.1386/ap3.1.1.155_1 %K anthropophagy %K LMFYFF character %K black representation %K Let Me Feel Your Finger First %K anthropomorphism %K Post-Colonial Cannibal %K cannibal cartoon %I Intellect, %X In the 1930s and 1940s, a popular genre of animated film emerged in the United States – the ‘cannibal cartoon’ – in which the anthropomorphized ‘white hero’, marooned on an island, was captured by a tribe of savage cannibals and thrown into the cooking pot. London-based comic art project Let Me Feel Your Finger First are designing a new animated character – ‘Post-Colonial Cannibal’ that makes reference to – and challenges – the depiction of ‘the savage’ in these early animated films. This article presents and discusses some of LMFYFF’s initial design ideas and examines two examples of the cannibal cartoon, Ub Iwerks’s Africa Squeaks (1931) and Walt Disney’s Trader Mickey (1932). Focusing on the animators’ visualizations of the cannibal king, the cannibal tribe and the anthropomorphized ‘white hero’, the article identifies particular components of the animators’ designs and considers the coded meanings contained therein. LMFYFF reflect on the influence of blackface minstrelsy and consider the cannibal’s place in animation’s ignoble history of racial stereotyping. And LMFYFF pose Post-Colonial Cannibal’s implicit question: how can a medium that has historically depended upon caricature – with its accompanying modes of simplification, exaggeration and distortion – represent otherness? %U https://intellectdiscover.com/content/journals/10.1386/ap3.1.1.155_1