Radical Satire and Print Culture, 1790-1822Clarendon Press, 1994 - 318 ページ With the publication of Marcus Wood's Radical Satire and Print Culture 1790-1822 there is at last a study that does justice to the work produced collaboratively between 1816 and 1822 by the poet and radical journalist William Hone and the brilliant young graphic artist George Cruikshank. The book provides new ways into the study of radical and Romantic satire. It uncovers hitherto forgotten or unimagined contexts for the work of Hone, Cruikshank, and their contemporaries. Radical satire fused the literary and political inheritance of seventeenth and eighteenth-century satire with the most up-to-date developments in advertising, popular publishing, and the print trade. Wood scrutinizes the complex parodic experiments which resulted, and reveals the satires which proliferated around the Peterloo Massacre and the Queen Caroline affair to evade distinctions between literature and trash, art and advertising, politics and propaganda. The book is also a major contribution to the current debate on relations between satire and parody. Popular satire in the Romantic age emerges as essentially parodic, extending beyond literary travesty to work upon dress codes, social customs, architecture, and the languages of church and law. Radical Satire and Print Culture teaches us that in order to understand the operations of parody we must be as ready to spot a reference to Packwood's celebrated razor strops, or to a Lutheran pornographic woodcut, as to pounce upon an echo from The Rape of the Lock. |
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57 ページ
... loyalist forms of publication should not be underestimated . The Rights of Man , arguably the most effective work of ... loyalists and radicals in less obvious ways and over a protracted period . From 1792 to 1795 the propaganda war ...
... loyalist forms of publication should not be underestimated . The Rights of Man , arguably the most effective work of ... loyalists and radicals in less obvious ways and over a protracted period . From 1792 to 1795 the propaganda war ...
58 ページ
... loyalist satires increased the public appetite for entertaining political literature in ways which the radicals would inevitably capi- talize upon in the decades to come . In one sense the immediate political content of Association ...
... loyalist satires increased the public appetite for entertaining political literature in ways which the radicals would inevitably capi- talize upon in the decades to come . In one sense the immediate political content of Association ...
260 ページ
... loyalists off against each other . Some of the work he produced dur- ing the Caroline affair attacking the radicals ... loyalist Association The radical ladder ; or , Hone's political ladder and his Non Me Ricordo explained and applied ...
... loyalists off against each other . Some of the work he produced dur- ing the Caroline affair attacking the radicals ... loyalist Association The radical ladder ; or , Hone's political ladder and his Non Me Ricordo explained and applied ...
目次
Advertising Politics and Parody 17101780 | 18 |
168 no 716 1796 78 | 49 |
Eaton Spence and Modes of Radical Subversion in | 57 |
著作権 | |
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多く使われている語句
advertising appeared attack attempt became become broadside brought caricature carried Catechism celebrated charge children's book Church Collection common constituted continued court describes detail developed discussion early effect eighteenth century England English engraving etching evidence example figure final forms French George Cruikshank give head History Hone Hone's illustration included interest James Gillray John journal judges jury King Ladder language late libel Lilburne linguistic literature London Lord loyalist mass methods Minister mock nature newspapers nineteenth century nursery original Oxford pamphlet parody period plate Political House popular presented produced propaganda prosecution publishing Queen quoted radical reform Regent relating religious rhyme satire shows Slop social Society Spence Spence's style taken Thomas Spence tion token took trial University various Wilkes Wood writings