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‘The Problem with Punch’

Miller, Henry

Authors

Henry Miller



Abstract

The comic periodical Punch is a popular source with academics working on the Victorian period and it has often been regarded as a ‘national institution’. This article takes a more nuanced view, arguing that Punch was primarily aimed at a metropolitan and middle‐class audience, although it did have considerable reach. Punch largely ignored provincial Britain and had little understanding of its mighty movements like Chartism, the Anti‐Corn Law League and the temperance movement. To get a better sense of public opinion in Victorian Britain as a whole, rather than just London, this article looks at the local comic periodicals which flourished all over Britain from the late eighteen‐sixties to the nineteen‐hundreds. The cartoons in these periodicals were very different from London cartoons, and national symbols of identity like John Bull and Britannia were surprisingly absent. Local identities were often personified instead. The ‘nationalization’ of the press from the eighteen‐nineties presaged the disappearance of these local comic periodicals and cartoons in the Edwardian period.

Citation

Miller, H. (2009). ‘The Problem with Punch’. Historical Research, 82(216), 285-302. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-2281.2007.00457.x

Journal Article Type Article
Online Publication Date Feb 28, 2008
Publication Date 2009-05
Deposit Date Sep 7, 2016
Journal Historical Research
Print ISSN 0950-3471
Electronic ISSN 1468-2281
Publisher Oxford University Press
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 82
Issue 216
Pages 285-302
DOI https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-2281.2007.00457.x
Public URL https://durham-repository.worktribe.com/output/1376935