Crocodile

Crocodile was a satirical weekly paper first published in August 1922, in the time of the early NEP. It printed drawings, prose and poetry, and was inexpensive and widely circulated.

Images from The Crocodile Album of Soviet Humour, ed. by Ivor Montague and Herbert Marshall, Pilot Press, 1943.

Hypnotic Experiment
in the Third Reich
Y. Ganf
1939
The Sporting Spirit
K. Rotov
1939
Berlin Wise Child
B. Fridkin
1939
Family Portraits
K. Rotov
1939
Carried Unanimously
B. Prorokov
1939
Our Collective Farm Ball
L. Gench
1939
Volga Voyage
L. Gench
1939
Equal Rights
N. Radlov
1939

Bolshevik cartoons--from the Crocodile and the Projector, reprinted in New Masses, April 1934

(accompanying text:) Self Criticism in Soviet Cartoons

(first sentences illegible)..If the first Five-Year Plan turned out a splendid success, if collectivization has won glorious victories, if industrial production is growing at an unprecedented rate, the ruthless and at times almost savage way in which the Bolsheviks criticize themselves had a great deal to do with it. To take a nation of backward individualist peasants, and mould them within a short time into efficient, cultured, and responsible industrial workers and collective farmers is a collossal task. In this the Soviet writers and artists have played a magnificent part. Cartoons are proving a most powerful weapon in satirizing foibles and criticizing failures. Small wonder there has been an efflorescence of the art of cartooning in the Soviet Union. The six cartoons on these pages have been culled out from recent Societ publications--the Crocodile and the Projector. (note: one cartoon ommitted, distorted on the center crease.)

Tulla Technique Thief: My Key Opens Them All! How To Obtain Fire
By Means of Matches
A Slap at Snobbery Criticism of Bureaucracy

See also cartoons from the Crocodile in the Children's Literature: Images pages