You’ve probably seen the backlash Michael Leunig received after his cartoon depicting a mother neglecting her baby for her phone was published in The Age and The Sydney Morning Herald on Wednesday.
There is little a mother can do these days without on or offline spectators slamming her. Mummy-shaming is real and rampant, and Leunig’s use of mummy was possibly a huge mistake, hindering his much more important message of our society’s addiction to social media.
As if daddies don’t do the same thing, Leunig, please.
Even though I understand why women took this cartoon as an attack on mothers, I believe Leunig was using the eternally profound image of mother and child to highlight what our addiction is doing to our most valued connections and society as a whole.
Artist William Hogarth used the same image in the harrowing Gin Lane to highlight the road to crisis the gin epidemic was paving in London. We look at this work today as epic, powerful, I haven’t heard any criticisms from feminists saying, “We were all addicted. This is mummy shaming. Do you have any idea what the dudes were doing? You do NOT want to know. Seriously.”