Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Source
Analysis
- Provenance/
origins of the
source
- Produced by an
American pilot serving
in the Berlin airlift
- Sergeant Jake Schuffert
- Cartoon was featured in
the Task Force times
- Produced by the
US government
especially for the
Berlin airlift and
blockade
- Date- the year given at the
top is 1948, right in the middle
of the airlift.
- Audience
- Readers of the
Task Force
Times
- Set up to promote
competition between
the airforce units.
- contained the aircraft
unit's statistics
- Therefore, not
available to the
general public
- represents the
views of those in the
airforce units.
- Implied meaning
- Those involved saw
no possible end to
the airlift.
- The coal and flour
'medals' devalue the
operation, suggesting
it was not as worthy
as their previous
tasks.
- Taken literally, the coal and
flour were being dropped in to
Berlin
- Source context
- Many military operations
involved sitting around for long
periods of time while important
preparations were made. The
Berlin Airlift was no exception.
This was not a relaxing time.
Aircrews had to sit around
waiting tensely for their flight to
begin.
- •Several American cartoonists commented on this
problem. One anonymous cartoonist produced the
famous Fassberg diary. This was a joke diary of the
Berlin Blockade, and ended with the fliers still
transporting goods into Berlin in the year 3200!