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Showing posts with label United Kingdom. Show all posts
Showing posts with label United Kingdom. Show all posts

Monday, September 12, 2022

Martin Barker in 2002 - Kicked into the Gutters: or, "My Dad Doesn't Read Comics, He Studies Them."

British comics scholar Martin Barker passed away last week. We're working on getting a remembrance of him, but here's something he wrote for us twenty years ago about his career.

Kicked into the Gutters: or, "My Dad Doesn't Read Comics, He Studies Them."

Martin Barker

IJOCA, 4(1; Spring 2002), pp. 64-77

 I never dreamed that I would become a comics researcher. Just about everything about me indicated against it. I didn't much read comics as a child (the odd solace of comics on holiday, plus a period of secret fascination with "Paddy Payne, Hero of the Skies" [The Lion, late-1950s]), and didn't at all as an adult, apart from a brief period of reading 2000AD. But comics, for 17 years or so, became a focus of my intellectual life. If there is worth in the ensuing autobiography, it is in the weird combinations of accident and necessity that can characterize real research histories. 1

I went to Liverpool University in 1964 to study Philosophy. Not just any old philosophy: Liverpool's Department had a studious fixation with the minutiae of analytic and ordinary language philosophical work, which provoked but didn't move me. No, I wanted Philosophy (capital P). Instead of Ludwig Wittgenstein, my mind got blown away by the eighteenth century philosopher Immanuel Kant, in particular his "architectonic," and the way that he proposed a vast account of the nature of "man" along with such small extras as an understanding of the nature of human history, human ethics and potentials –all derived from his ontological accounts of reason, understanding, imagination, and the senses. I was really only interested in philosophy in so far as it would answer big questions (including political ones), by dealing with big concepts: the exact opposite of everything I was being taught. One sign already of what would motivate me eventually in the study of comics: I am a contrary swine. But it is still a long journey from philosophical anthropology to panelology…

This was the 1960s, and I was hectically involved in both student and radical socialist politics. Malgre what many people say, it was a great time to be alive and committed. Its aftershocks were complex, but it left me essentially a happy, busy person, who entered higher education teaching in 1969 without a clue what I was really doing there. The answer to that came slowly during the 1970s. With just two colleagues, Anne Beezer and Jean Grimshaw, I became involved in the British cultural studies tradition. Cultural Studies (note the capitalization), now, is a wide-reaching collation of fields and approaches. If they have a common core, it is in the commitment to study the role of the ideational and imaginative within all aspects of human life. But in those early heady days it was more specific. Then, cultural studies (note the lower case) was grounded in debates within academic Marxism about the role of ideology in the maintenance or break-up of power blocs. The pull of cultural studies was paradoxical to me. I won't speak for Anne or Jean, whose trajectory has been different from mine, but for me there was a theoreticism, and a politics consonant with that, that just rang all wrong. The project was vital, the emergent theories all to pot. The courses we developed at, then, Bristol Polytechnic combined it with elements of philosophy and sociology to study the nature of ideas and ideologies, from the broadest (we examined socio-biology and behaviorism as theories of human nature, along with accounts of "human needs") to the most particular (we studied everything from TV police series, as a case-study of narrative, to Daily Mail reports on immigration, in order to query definitions of"racism").

Because we were in a Communication subject group, our students were also acquiring practical audiovisual skills. What to do for content, though? Our bridge between theory and practice was to get our students to combine two processes: deconstructing some particular media materials, so as to bring out their implicit patterns and proposals to audiences; and then designing and producing an audiovisual demonstration of what they had found through that deconstruction. At their best, these could be quite remarkable -- I have to this day vivid memories of particular projects on press reporting of a students' grants demonstration in London; on a curious docu-comic produced to celebrate the Iranian Embassy siege by the SAS; and on the role of the presenter in TV current affairs debates. Mind, some of them were truly awful, as well. But they had the collective virtue that they pressed our students to work at the gaps between the specificity of their materials and the gross easy conceptualizations then dominant.

This was when I encountered Irena. Irena knew what she wanted to do -- she wanted to study Superman. She also knew how she wanted to study him -- through the lenses of Carl Jung's psychology. I tried to supervise Irena, with rising despair. The despair wasn't primarily with her, but with two things: the seeming arbitrariness of applying Jungian concepts to something as distant and detailed as the pages of particular issues of Superman; and my own inability to do any better -- I knew damn all about this comic, or comics in general. And it got my goat.

One day in the late 1970s, I trudged to our library to find, from its pre-electronic catalogue, what it could offer me on comics. Just two items turned up. One was an early collection on aspects of popular culture, with one essay on Superman and other things (Bigsby, 1976). The other was a weird leftover book, surviving from the days when this had been a teacher training college, by one George Pumphrey (1956). Sorry, who? And what, when it was once at home, was the "Comics Campaign Council" to which he attached so much importance? More intriguingly, what exactly was this campaign to which it must have been attached?

I had never done empirical research. Philosophers in my experience reduce "empirical evidence" to randomly generated slick examples which allow them to make a neat point. But I had at least learned, through working with our students, how to sample newspapers, magazines, and other ephemera in order to conduct close analyses. A combination of this with my philosophical training and political commitments did produce one useful tendency: a will to take a hard look at other people's concepts, to strip them out, and to explore their implicit claims, theories and world-views. That had enabled me to research my first ever book. The New Racism (1981) examined the emergent account of culture" in the political speeches of anti-immigration campaigner Enoch Powell, and a peculiar confluence between this and the rise of two strands of innatist biological thinking: ethology, typified by Desmond Morris and Robert Ardrey; and the socio-biology of Richard Dawkins and Edward O Wilson. But I had never learned to do the kinds of thorough digging that, for instance, would be bread-and-butter to a historian. Intrigued by my own ignorance of this comics campaign, I blundered gaily into all kinds of areas. Some, I got miraculously right -- a letter to a teachers' paper, asking if anyone had memories of the campaign, turned up six people who had been pretty centrally involved. Others, I got dreadfully wrong and had to be rescued by those more knowledgeable -- belated thanks to those comics collectors who told me gently that you can't just expect someone to offer you a spare copy of Crimes By Women 3 -- but who nonetheless helpfully led me to reprints, copies, cheap and cheery rip-offs. Learning to do empirical research has become over time a way of rebuilding myself. To me, now, it is driven by three tough questions:

a) How do I know I am going about this inquiry in the right ways?

b) What am I getting that is new, surprises me, or challenges existing thinking?

c) What needs rethinking as a result? What further research should follow on?

The first has taken me longest to come to terms with -- issues of method and methodology in media and cultural studies are particularly fraught.

Interlude 1: My research into the horror comics campaign was inchoate, a melange of questionnaires (badly designed, they taught me nothing), archival investigations (where I made up the rules as I went along), searches for and analyses of the comics involved (here, the payoff was slow, but considerable), and interviews with participants. It was these last that in the end, almost by accident, gave me the story. What I eventually learned was astonishing. That the leading role in the entire campaign had been taken by the British Communist Party. That in the course of their involvement they blinded themselves to what they were doing, shifting their rhetorics from talk of "American cultural imperialism" vs "British heritage" ( a specific Stalinist position) to talk of "horror" vs "children" (a classic moralistic position). That as a result of this move, they ended up attacking the very comics which ( analysis revealed) were among the few popular cultural materials of that period to resist the McCarthyite paranoia about "communists." In other words, their adopted rhetorics led to them attacking their few friends. Many other issues were broached in the process, not least the curious role played by images of children and childhood.

My findings kept suggesting further issues and directions. First, how to think generally about campaigns of this kind? The crucial thing to emerge was the difficult fact that the campaigners' accounts of their own motives and purposes could not be trusted. Only when I dug behind their claims did the politics of the campaign come into view. The then-prevailing concept of a "moral panic" wasn't specific enough to handle this complexity. That indicated more work to do.

 Next, the campaigners' theories. What struck me then, and still strikes me now, is the interweaving of rhetorical claims with bits of science. Most notably, Fredric Wertham 's work on the horror comics provided an intellectual justification of some force and complexity for the campaigners. Yet it was so easy to see how poor his evidence and argument were. How, then, had he been so persuasive? The contrary swine in me would have his day -- I realized that Wertham depended on an un-argued agreement with concepts which are still present and, to this day, largely accepted without argument. None more than the concept of "identification." What should this tell us about the status of such concepts, and how do we ensure we move beyond such disguised partisanship? Work to do -- on two fronts. First, to look at the way campaigns such as this recruit "scientific theories and concepts" for their purposes; second, to make sense of these disinclinations to inquire into some concepts, in my very own field.

 Then, the comics themselves: by this time there was a rising interest in cultural studies in what became known as "textual analysis." Crudely, this was grounded in semiological theories of meaning, which permitted moves from how meaning may be "encoded" within forms of culture generally, to accounts of the particular meanings made in local instances. With care, these could be adapted to the study of comics pages. But in this work was an unquestioned assumption: that encoded meanings work by a process of transfer (whether this be called "encoding," or "interpellation"). Even though this semiotic tradition set itself in sharp opposition to American behavioral psychological traditions, it shared at least one concept with those traditions: the concept of "identification," as a means for depicting how people might become engrossed in a narrative and its meanings. But my analysis of the story which constituted the epicentre of the British debate over the "horror comics," "The Orphan,"3 put that entire concept at risk. Work to do. Why this repeated focus on "identification"? Because of the implications for the audience: unknown, unloved, condemned by implication, no one would speak for them, except perhaps me. I wanted to know who they were. What were their pleasures and engagements with these publications? I had no information, and not a clue on how to find any. Perhaps, given the long lapse of time, it was impossible to find out. 2 It took me several years and two further projects to gain the methodological tools to see how this might be done. In the meantime, I could at least defend their right to enjoy these comics, and show that the comics couldn't have affected them in the ways that were claimed. End of Interlude 1

 What emerged from two years' research on the British horror comics campaign (see Barker, 1984) has largely stood the test of time. Several years later, I was able to examine British Cabinet Papers for this period, and to discover that the Government had been even more loath to introduce the censoring Bill than I had guessed ( this led me to reassess how far the campaign had to succeed -- I realized retrospectively that I had been a bit deterministic about it all). It was even more of a pleasure to learn that first a Scottish comic fan, then two folklore researchers had picked up on the story of the Glasgow vampire scare (which I used to illustrate the ways in which the "panic" about the comics latched absurdly onto other issues), and run with it, to uncover a whole separate history there (Breadner, 1985; Hobbs & Cornwell, 1988). It was a reminder of how much remained to be researched.

 The piece of research that most directly flowed from this first one concerned the case of Action (1976). I tripped over this story while researching the 1950s, and became intrigued at the possibility of tackling some of the unexplored issues left over from there. In particular, since it was now 1986, only ten years had elapsed. Might I be able to find some of the former readers of Action? Some 50 letters in random local British newspapers later, I had around 170 addresses, which eventually gave me 13 7 completed questionnaires. This questionnaire did work -- in ways I had not anticipated.

 Interlude 2: Action was a product of the British comics industry entering and responding to a crisis of falling sales. Having to reinvent itself, and its relations to readers, the then IPC brought in new editors, writers, and artists -- eventually finding a long-term winning formula in its comic 2000AD and the character "Judge Dredd." Action was one attempt, and a short-term spectacular one, along the way. Forced off the newsagents' shelves after only eight months by a powerful campaign against it on moral grounds ("too violent," "celebrating gratuitous hooliganism," etc, etc), Action had won a readership who showed a real devotion to their comic -- and complained bitterly at its passing. So, what was the story? How did it get to be produced (I hadn't thought of asking that question of the horror comics, although Jack Kamen, EC's uncelebrated artist on "The Orphan" and later my friend, belatedly taught me to think about this)? What was the hidden history of this campaign (I definitely knew not to trust the official accounts)? And what might I learn about the readers, their pleasures and preferences?

 I knew how to be a bit more systematic this time. I interviewed all the major figures involved in the development and production of the comic (company decision-makers, editors, in-house production staff, writers, artists). I obtained, by a mild subterfuge, an entire set of the first (precensorship) run of the comic. I was then given, as a gift, a rare and immeasurably valuable item: one of only seven surviving copies of the edition suppressed by IPC when Action was withdrawn in September 197 6. It allowed me to do a story-by-story, panel-by-panel comparison between what the comic would have been, and what was issued when a bowdlerized Action returned to fade away, after six weeks' absence. And my questionnaire to my 137 respondents was designed to allow me to explore some very specific questions, which I had begun to realize were important. If "identification" isn't a useful term for capturing how people engage with such materials, what might be? I was developing a concept of "commitment," designed to capture the different ways in which, and degrees to which people feel that a story, or genre, or publication ( or whatever) sufficiently speaks to them that they care about it, involve themselves in it, and thereby make demands of it. So I asked my former readers to tell me if they had been Casual, Regular, or Committed readers of Action -- and then analyzed the results, quantitatively and qualitatively. The results were striking -- a clear, sharp difference showed in the very understanding that these groups had of the nature of the stories, and the uses to which they could be put. Crudely, the more Committed the reader, the more he (they were mostly male) saw the comic as intelligent, questioning, cynical, anti-authority. This is the exact opposite of the image presented by both campaigners, and "media scientists."

 Although the context was totally different (mid- l 970s, in the midst of a spate of moral campaigns around various media, with a wholly different publishing context, etc), as with the 1950s it emerged that there was a political drive. Summed up, and made into a practical imperative, by an anonymous company spokesman who instructed Action's production team to "take out all that adult political stuff and tum it back into a boys' adventure comic," this politics resonated with a wider set of issues. It made me address much broader questions about the maintenance of cultural categories (welcome aboard, Pierre Bourdieu) and about the ways, at a particular historical moment, cultural resources can encapsulate and embody the imaginative needs of social groups (make room there, please, for Lucien Goldmann).

 As a result of doing this research, new doors opened for me. The immediate successor to Action was 2000AD -- a sardonic, blackly-humorous science fiction comic. With over-weaning ambition, I set myself to research and produce a critical history of this comic. I read every edition (Prog.) of the comic in IPC's archive, and started to analyze them. I interviewed editors, writers, and artists. I explored (new for me) the important connection with the rising network of specialist comics shops in Britain. I began to study the economics of the comics industry: patterns of capital investment, rates of amortization of capital, calculations of distribution, financial decision-making processes ... I was becoming lost in a field where I simply wasn't grounded enough. The work slid quietly into several drawers, there still to lie – apart from one aspect, to which I return in a moment. End of Interlude 2

 By now, I had "scores to settle" inside my own field. By the mid- l980s there was a rising acceptance that it was good to link teaching to research (an acceptance institutionalized in the early 1990s by the official loved/hated Research Assessment Exercise). Now I was able to develop a whole module for students on comics: their history, their textual nature, their cultural status, their different national traditions, and so on. Increasingly I had to skirmish more widely, to see what reading resources I could find for my students. By this time, Cultural Studies (now definitely capitalized) had developed a tendency to fads, leaping from theory to concept to approach with an unself-critical abandon. Part of my motivation for being a researcher in the first place was to put a distance between myself and this tendency. Around the late 1970s, we were encountering more and more of the output from the Birmingham Centre for Contemporary Cultural Studies, which was changing, and fast, away from where I stood politically. The new phase that emerged offered heady, but to me hostile, mixtures of feminism, Althusser, and psychoanalysis. This got embodied exemplarily for me in one essay by Angela McRobbie, an essay that was quoted, feted, reprinted -- and utterly wrong. McRobbie's analysis of the British teenage girls' magazine Jackie found within it an "ideology of adolescent femininity" (McRobbie, 1978). The problem was, she didn't say what editions of Jackie she had used, and her method (a "take" on Barthesian semiotics) was singularly un-transparent. I spent many an obsessive hour in the British Newspaper Library tracking down those elusive editions, and then -- an act that even now leaves me feeling faintly nauseous -- reading a sample month of every year of Jackie from its start in 1964. Part of my reason was, again, that suspicion of the overarching theorization, and its "tidy" and convenient political conclusions. Feminism had to win, the "patriarchal" comics had to the villains -- no matter what their girl-readers might have thought about them.

 Equivalently, another cultural studies notable Valerie Walkerdine published on younger girls' comics (Bunty, Tracy, Judy, and other titles hardly known outside the UK), mounting an argument about the role of their stories in "training" young girls for submissive adulthood and emotional submission. Back to the British Newspaper Library. Walkerdine's case was a degree more sophisticated, and the methods by which she looked at the stories more explicit. But here again, my suspicion turned on an egregious use of psychoanalytic theory, and yet another version of that concept of "identification." So, combining a reconsideration of her textual analysis with a minimal production history of these comics (not easy to get at – the publishers, D C Thomson, are notoriously secretive), I mounted an argument to show that Walkerdine had misread the nature of these narratives. They couldn't be direct expressions of and "operations upon girls" psychic needs, as she argued -- the publishers were too nervous to allow that. Only once in her studied period had these comics touched their audiences very directly, at a moment when Thomson for once loosened the reins -- in a story which flatly contradicted Walkerdine's account. So nervous were they of the reaction they got, that they didn't repeat the experiment. That one, crucial story breaks the mould upon which Walkerdine's account is built.

 The pattern of my work in this period was pretty unidirectional. It was a series of conscious revisitings of other people's claims about comics.4 I was the debunker, the sceptic within. My interest in comics was primarily that other people were interested in them -- but kept criticizing them in the wrong way, for the wrong reasons. The work on Action, McRobbie's Jackie,

Walkerdine's Bunty, etc. combined with revisitations of Dorfman &  Mattelart's classic anti-Disney study and a series of journalistic critiques of children's comics5 came together into one book (Barker 1989). Finishing this book, and outlining my alternative to the approaches I was damning, involved a gargantuan struggle to understand the work of Valentin Volosinov -- and then, in more of a hurry than I like to admit, the construction of my theory of the "contract" between audiences and generic forms.

 In the early 1990s I ascended the dizzy heights of becoming Head of School of Cultural Studies (I didn't even wince at the capitalization!), and a "Doctor." By dint of submitting several books (including Comics), and undergoing a grilling from two good (but extremely hard-hearted) colleagues, I was awarded a doctorate by existing publication. Whilst held over that griddle, my examiners pressed me: here I was making counter-claims to many "readings" of comics, yet it could be argued that my counters were simply that, alternative "readings." Perhaps they were at that level more convincing, but they still remained at that level. Why didn't I dare to do audience research?

 I had of course done it with Action, and in a different way with the children's comics. But the relative truth of that accusation rankled. And those Action questionnaires had left me distinctly unsatisfied. When the book of Action reprints appeared in 1991 (Barker, 1991 ), I began to get a trickle of letters from former readers thanking me for giving it back to them. For all that I wasn't a comics fan, it made me want to hear the voices of the fans and, if possible, to be the person who would enable their de-legitimated voices to be heard. 6 And there was a pleasure, in the other direction, in being invited to speak to groups of fans, to conventions, to feel that the work one does has meaning and impact outside academia. Maybe I could use this.

 The one bit of the 2000AD research to survive was a study of 2000AD readers. In the mid-1980s, I had developed a very complex questionnaire for this purpose. My daughter gave many unpaid hours to input the data into a tailor-made computer program, at a time when such things were still pretty primitive. The results were nugatory, and confusing. I persisted, and eventually among the brute data some small patterns emerged -- patterns which suggested that there might be a number of distinctive, perhaps contradictory, orientations to the comic. So I re-approached a number of the people who had completed my questionnaire, and asked if they would allow me to interview them.

 These people were scattered far and wide -- the furthest away, in Australia (on this one, see Barker, 1997). There was no way I could do face-to-face interviews with them. So I simply invented a device, more in indecent hope than rational expectation. With their agreement, I sent each person a sheet of questions -- mainly gentle, open-ended questions such as "Tell me about your favourite stories in the comic, and why they are these ones" and "How would you say your comics are important to you -- do you re-read them, for instance?" -- and a blank audio cassette. Would they please record their answers? The results were strange. A majority of the people I asked did record their tapes, and they are wonderful. One, in particular, gave me a most extraordinary feeling, when a young female comic fan responded. I had been about to tum off the tape, and almost missed it. Having finished what I had officially wanted, she started talking again for a further 20 minutes, telling me her philosophy of life, and how comics-reading fitted into that -- the fit was serious, sensuous, and stunning. Evidently, at the start, my respondents had felt awkward -- sitting on their own in a room, with a tape recorder, answering questions. To cope with this, they seemed to build up a mental picture of me, and then talked to that. I was at last being forced to think seriously about methodological procedures. I had simultaneously stumbled over a major issue of research practice, and a partial solution.

 Interlude 3: The main 2000AD research may have been sidelined, but it did throw up other occasional possibilities. While researching at IPC's London archives in 1993, I got wind of a project to produce a new comic, Alternity -- to be a younger version of 2000AD. Tentatively and carefully (because we had nearly had a fall-out over the book of the best, plus suppressed, pages of Action), I asked if it might be possible to observe the processes by which it was planned and produced. An open acknowledgement and thanks: I had nothing but generous help from the publishers, once they knew that I was not the kind of academic they had encountered before, who comes in, appears genuinely interested, then departs to sneer and complain. And I do believe that comics publishers were for a long time right to distrust the research community, at least here in Britain.

 The story of 2000AD's junior partner was fascinating. Three whole tranches of commercial research were funded, dummies produced and tested, and production staff hired in readiness for a launch -- which never happened (see Barker, 1994 ). This episode was important to me. It was my first attempt to research a complete production process. And in particular it pointed me to something which has remained important to me: the ways in which, often through their own research, publishers increasingly form images of their possible audiences, to whom they then address their publications. These "figures of the audience," which I had grown used to studying in the works of moral campaigners, demonstrably played a vital role in the planning of Alternity. But they were not put to the test, because of a major shift in production imperatives. In 1995 IPC was bought out by a Swedish publishing giant Gutenberghus. The logic of their publishing empire required two things: that as far as possible they should deal in brand items -- there are reasons to suggest that they bought IPC in order to acquire the European rights to Disney brand titles; and that, in association with that, nothing should be published that could not, with perhaps a degree of translation, be issued in at least three countries. The history, and operation of these publishing logics are something I still hope to put on my research agenda for the future. End of Interlude 3

 It was my very involvement with comics fans that led to my eventual departure from comics research. In 1995, the news emerged that what 200AD fans had been waiting for since 1977 was to happen: a big screen version of "Judge Dredd." But even as they celebrated that the director was to be a fan of the comic, Danny Cannon, they shivered when they realized that Dredd was to be played by ... Sylvester Stallone. Many a brave face was put on the situation.

 The film was planned for 1995. When I heard about the forthcoming film of Dredd, I knew I had to grab the opportunity. Taking advice on how to make funding applications (something I had tried once before, amateurishly and without success) I applied outside my domain to the Economic & Social Research Council for an 18-month grant to study different expectations of the film, how these turned into different viewing strategies once people got to see the film, and how these then led to different evaluations of it. There is no overstating the excitement, and fear, that goes with succeeding in such an application -- because suddenly every step in the research will be scrutinized and evaluated by colleagues. The findings of that research, co-published with my excellent research assistant, constituted the first attempt to explore the actual pleasures that audiences seek in action-adventure movies (Barker & Brooks, 1998).

 It was in many ways the end of a learning trajectory for me. I now had at my disposal a body of knowledge which I could deploy on the film (about the fans, about the history and nature of the character, about the significance of that character at various levels). I had at my disposal a variety of research methods, both my own and those I was increasingly learning to borrow from the social sciences. I was increasingly involved in the field of discourse analysis, which promised much as a systematic set of procedures for exploring people's repertoires and strategies for responding to things such as films.

 And I had a set of emergent concepts, each derived from my research engagements within the comics field -- but I was off into the world of film. One project, with Roger Sabin, allowed me to cross back, as we explored together the remarkable history of adaptations and transformations of James Fenimore Cooper's Last of the Mahicans (Barker & Sabin, 1996). What was particularly interesting to me, there, was to see simultaneously that the comic book versions have their distinctive histories -- but that they partake in the broader histories of culture and politics that have governed Cooper's weird role and profile.

 There, and around there, I now reside. I have, since the successful completion of the Judge Dredd research, also succeeded in getting grant support for research into the controversy over Crash in the UK in 1996-7 (see Barker, Arthurs & Harindranath, 2001). I am currently studying a stage adaptation of Crash, and the audiences for that, which I discovered was being developed in Aberystwyth when I took up post here. I am in process of researching the strange world of art-house audiences, via lovers of Being John Malkovich. It is fairly clear to me that I have now left the field of comics research. I've published three and a quarter books and six essays of research directly on comics. My motives have been oddly mixed -- I am not a comics fan or lover, but I have grown to love the ones that I have researched. My motives for leaving are also mixed -- partly opportunistic, partly driven by a sense that the moralistic interventions which I have continuously sought to challenge are centered elsewhere, partly -- let me admit it -- because I personally enjoy films more than comics. I hope that I have left the field more developed than when I entered it in the late 1970s. I do know that many other researchers, with skills and from traditions other than mine, are doing stunning work in there now, and I wish you all well. If I have a message to leave in this "bottle," it is this: distrust easy concepts and theorizations -- they are the bane of understanding, and the tools of our enemies.

 Endnotes

1 This essay was not written as a response to Mark C. Rogers' discussion of my work ( among other British cultural studies work) on comics -- in fact Rogers' essay is in general a friendly, accurate summary of main trends. However, it is arguably mistaken in three areas, as this account will hopefully show: first, some of us have sought to address the production histories and contexts of comics. Second, the reasons for the decline in comics research in Britain are more complicated than he allows -- at least in my own case. Third, one sentence is not right: "The work of Martin Barker is all about the issue of how texts affect readers" (Rogers, 2001: 96). The debates about this were certainly my starting point -- they are not where I have ended. I would also note that Rogers' compendium of British cultural studies work on comics is not as complete as he believes -- there has also, for instance, been significant work here on Vietnam War comics, on Underground Comix, and on the use of comics within education.

 2 Much later, in an essay revisiting my research on the campaign, I managed a small approach to this -- drawing on some fragments of evidence, and locating them within a broader framework. See Barker, 1999.

 3 Originally published in EC's Shock SuspenStories 14 (1954), it was reprinted in Britain in A Haunt of Fear l (1954). This story received significantly more abuse than any other, at this time, therefore was of singular interest.

 4 I returned to this later, in a one-off contribution to a book on photography. An invitation from the editors to contribute gave me the opportunity/excuse to look at the way in which, over time, comics have dealt with the digital. Being me, I had to have someone to club in the process. Claudia Springer, in an essay first, then in a book, sought to make big theoretical claims about the significance of a group of comics (titles) for yet another emergent Cultural Studies fetish of that time: the cyborg. Latter-day feminisms, seeking a way to refresh their politics, took up in a big way the highly-flawed but mightily cited essay by Donna Haraway ("A Manifesto for Cyborgs") as a basis for developing theories of new gender-identities. Ever the sceptic, my essay looked at the contexts of the production of the comics which Springer claimed to analyze. See Barker, 1996.

 5 I have long been especially pleased with my analysis of the comic-strip 'Scream Inn' and what I learned about its readers from a close quantitative analysis of readers' applications to propose stories for this. It was my first major foray into quantitative work, and I've always regretted the fact that it has elicited no interest at all. That's a researcher's life for you.

 6 In this sense and to this extent, my ambitions were not that different from those of the tradition of fan-research which developed, particularly in America, in the late 1980s. The work of Henry Jenkins, Lisa Lewis, John Tulloch, John Fiske, Camille Bacon-Smith, and others has been important and influential. It has also, rightly in my view, been quite sharply criticized for its devotional attitude to its fans, which has gone far enough in some hands to want to treat, for example, Star Trek fans as a kind of radical political resistance movement.

 References

-Barker, Martin. A Haunt of Fears: the Strange Case of the British Horror Comics Campaign. London: Pluto Press, 1984. Republished, Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 1992.

-Barker, Martin. Comics: Ideology, Power and the Critics. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1989.

-Barker, Martin. Action: the Story of a Violent Comic. London: Titan Books, 1991.

-Barker, Martin. "Very Nearly in Front of the Children: The Case of Alternity." In David -Buckingham & Cary Bazalgette (eds). In Front of the Children. London: BFI, 1994.

-Barker, Martin. "On Seeing How Far You Can See: The Fans of' Judge Dredd." In David Buckingham (ed), pp. 159-83. Reading Audiences: Young People and the Media. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1993.

-Barker, Martin. "Drawing Attention to the Image: Computers and Comics." In Martin Lister (ed), pp.188-213. The Photographic Image in Digital Culture. London: Routledge.

-Barker, Martin, with Roger Sabin. The Lasting of the Mahicans: History of an American Myth. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, 1996.

-Barker, Martin. "Taking the Extreme Case: Understanding a Fascist Fan of Judge Dredd." In Deborah Cartmell et al. (eds), Trash Aesthetics: Popular Culture and its Audience, pp.14-30. London: Pluto Press, 1997.

-Barker, Martin, with Kate Brooks. Knowing Audiences: Judge Dredd, Its Friends,Fans and Foes. University of Luton Press, 1998.

-Barker, Martin. "Getting a Conviction: or, How the British Horror Comics Campaign Only Just Succeeded" and "Fredric Wertham -- the Sad Case of the Unhappy Humanist." In John A Lent (ed), Pulp Demons. London: Fairleigh Dickinson Press, 1999.

-Barker, Martin, with Jane Arthurs & Ramaswami Harindranath. The Crash Controversy: Censorship Campaigns and Film Reception. London: Wallflower Press, 2001.

-Bigsby, CW E, ed. Approaches to Popular Culture. London: Edward Arnold, 1976.

-Breadner, Alex. "The Gorbals Vampire." Fusion. No.5, 1985.

-Dorfman, Ariel & Armand Mattelart. How To Read Donald Duck: Imperialist Ideology in the Disney Comic. NY: International General, 1973.

-Hobbs, Sandy & David Cornwell. "Hunting the Monster with Iron Teeth." Perspectives on Contemporary Legend, Vol. III, pp.115-37. Sheffield: Sheffield Academic Press, 1988.

-McRobbie, Angela. "Jackie: An Ideology of Adolescent Femininity." Occasional Papers, CCCS University of Birmingham, 1978.

-Pumphrey, George. Children's Comics: A Guide for Parents and Teachers, London: Epworth Press, 1956.

-Rogers, Mark C. "Ideology in Four Colours: British Cultural Studies Do Comics." International Journal of Comic Art. Spring 2001, pp. 93-108.

-Springer, Claudia. "The Pleasures of the Interface." Screen. 32:3 (1991), pp. 303-23. Reprinted in her Electronic Eros: Bodies and Desire in the Postindustrial Age. London: Athlone Press, 1996.

-Walkerdine, Valerie. "Some Day My Prince Will Come." In Angela McRobbie

& Mica Nava, eds. Gender and Generation. Basingstoke: Macmillan, 1984.

 Martin Barker is now Professor of Film and Television Studies at the University of Wales, Aberystwyth, after working for 29 years at Bristol Polytechnic/University of West of England (Bristol) and briefly at the University of Sussex. He is the author of eleven books on various aspects of cultural and media studies, including (recently) From Antz To Titanic: Reinventing Film Analysis (London: Pluto Press, 2000). He is currently researching film and theatre audiences, and planning a major study of the effectiveness of film education materials produced for young people.

Thursday, December 2, 2021

Review Essay: Rebirth of the English Comic Strip: A Kaleidoscope, 1847-1870 by David Kunzle

David Kunzle. Rebirth of the English Comic Strip:  A Kaleidoscope, 1847-1870, Jackson:  University Press of Mississippi, 2021. Hardcover:  ISBN:  978-1-4968-3399-0, 472 pp., 309 b&w & 12 color illustrations. US $90. https://www.upress.state.ms.us/Books/R/Rebirth-of-the-English-Comic-Strip


 A Review Essay

 by

Richard Scully

Reviewing another book for another journal, Michael Connerty (2021) observed that “This is a good time to be alive for anybody interested in the development of cartooning and comic strip art during the nineteenth century.” Among the reasons why, he mentioned the hugely-significant recent study of Marie Duval by Simon Grennan, Roger Sabin, and Julian Waite (2020), and my own Eminent Victorian Cartoonists (2018). To that list we should also add Ian Haywood’s The Rise of Victorian Caricature (2020), and Brian Maidment’s Robert Seymour and Nineteenth-Century Print Culture (2021), but of the original three works Connerty mentioned, the one that probably represents an epoch in the field is the latest--and possibly final--offering by the “foundational scholar” of early comics history:  David Kunzle.

With The Rebirth of the English Comic Strip, Kunzle returns to explore the British contexts first touched upon more than a generation ago in The Early Comic Strip (1973) and then in The History of the Comic Strip, Vol. II:  The Nineteenth Century (1990). At the time, it was the German and Francophone comic artists whose work was given pride of place in the grand narrative of c. 1450-1825 and beyond, to the 1890s. Only two of the chapters of The Nineteenth Century related to “England”--just 36-odd pages out of the total of 300--and in Rebirth, Kunzle expresses regret that “space restriction inhibited closer look at the English contribution,” especially given “the riches of Britain’s contribution to the comic strip” (x).

This richness is now given its due, with nearly all the main subjects first explored in 1990--and additional topics discovered in the intervening decades--examined with customary thoroughness and incisiveness; and all in the unmistakable prose style that has led so many of us to follow Kunzle into the serious study of comics. David Kunzle has always written inclusively. Second-person pronouns abound, as “we” are taken along for a remarkable peek into the archives. The story told in Rebirth is not merely his hobby horse, but “our exploration” (398). The language is not preserved in the amber-like fixity of the formal “academese” past tense--it is living and present. It is often funny. It is emotive. From the very beginning to the charming and beautiful postscript at the very end (437). Kunzle is also a master of dropping in and out of different modes, such as a divergence into Victorian theatricality in the Prologue (xv-xvi), the “Once upon a time” (xi), or the excurses that appear in several chapters (50-52; 97; 112-113; 200; 410-412). This is to say nothing of the way Kunzle--and the publishers--allows the comic art to speak for itself for page after page (a fortunate byproduct of intellectual property law, and the presence of such work in the public domain, rather than in corporate hands).

Divided into chapters focused on particular artists (e.g. Chapter 1 on George Cruikshank) or publications (e.g. Chapter 2 on The Man in the Moon, 1847-1849), the approach is chronological, and covers what W. L. Burn called The Age of Equipoise (1964). This was the period of relative calm that characterized “the Mid-Victorian generation” between the ending of the “hungry ‘40s” amidst the upheavals of Chartism and the Continent-wide revolutions of 1848, and the Gladstonian ascendancy, Beaconsfieldism, and the “New Imperialism” of the 1880s and 1890s. While Burn concentrated on 1852 to 1867, Kunzle’s span of time is a little longer:  between the “sudden erupt[ion] of “comic strip fireworks” in 1847 (ix), and the “bizarre new stylistic era” beginning around 1870. Context is king from the outset of the book, and the cultural status of the Victorian magazine (arbitrated by Carlyle and Dickens), and the “sociopolitical history” of a period not well-known for its comic strips, is presented in fine form. The contrast between Britain (or England, as Kunzle has it) and France; the working lives of comic artists; the sources for comic comment; and--in a deliberate glance back to 1990 and The Nineteenth Century--the crucial importance of a society shaped by the railways and by the theatre, all make for an ideal Prologue.

The prehistory of the English comic strip is the focus for the Introduction, with Hogarth the logical starting point. Kunzle sees the narrative, though, as a disconnected one. From Hogarth to the “Great Age of Caricature” there is continuity, but huge changes in the “printing and publishing industries, cultural attitudes (such as the ‘Victorian’ rejection of Regency libertinism), and caricature itself” separated Kunzle’s period of Rebirth from what had gone before. This is actually rather an older way of viewing the periodization, and the evolution of British comic art; something challenged by Brian Maidment and others (including myself). But here is nonetheless an engaging narrative encompassing Rodolphe Töpffer--whose reputation Kunzle has done much to reinforce in two key volumes (2007a and 2007b)--and a potential, crucial transnational transfer from his Swiss homeland to England via John Ruskin and George Eliot (3-4). Rounding out the chapter is a somewhat disconnected study of Robert Seymour, who--Kunzle argues--“deserves to be remembered for more than his illustrations to Pickwick, his pre-Punch satirical Figaro in London (1831-1838), or his tragic suicide at the age of thirty-eight” (8). It’s a little surprising that Kunzle shows some ignorance of Brian Maidment’s (2013a) early work on Seymour, which went a long way towards remedying such a myopia, and has culminated with the first full-length study just this year (2021).

Where Kunzle is on firmer ground is in his shedding new light on the otherwise well-known and high-profile artists of the Victorian Age. In the first of the substantive chapters, Kunzle focuses on George Cruikshank (of the famous dynasty of caricaturists), and explores his work in the temperance and teetotal social movement in depth. Following Robert Patten’s immense, two-volume biography of Cruikshank (1992; 1996)--itself almost a conscious imitation of the classic Victorian form of the genre--it’s hard to imagine how anything new could be said about this Janus-faced figure. But Kunzle draws-in likely influences from Töpffer and re-interprets much of Cruikshank’s work; and The Toothache is dealt with in ways not hitherto appreciated as well.

Albert Smith’s brief, but significant, Man in the Moon (1847-1849) takes up Chapter 2, and Kunzle successfully rescues that publication from more than a century of condescension by Punch scholars. Since his departure from Punch, the judgement of his one-time peers, Douglas Jerrold and Mark Lemon, has been that Smith was “vulgar and bumptious” (43) and that his own paper was little more than a foil to the senior paper. Kunzle sees much more merit in its pages than the admittedly quite deliberate swipes at Punch. For starters, there was Cham’s (Amédée de Noé) contribution (45-47), and the work of Henry Hine and the character Mr. Crindle. Nevertheless, Man in the Moon did deflate (just as assuredly as did Smith’s own hot-air balloon in 1847), and Kunzle does a good job of accounting for that (as well as providing a nice summation of Europe’s revolutionary atmosphere around the time of its demise).

Beginning with Chapter 3, Kunzle embarks on a truly fascinating series of studies of Punch that truly breaks new ground. So, while the existing literature on Punch is vast (and is still growing), it is surprising that neither Richard D. Altick (1997), nor Frankie Morris (2005), Patrick Leary (2010) or Brian Maidment (2013b), have picked-up on this crucial role as not merely an inspiration for comic strip magazines, but also the very practice. This is the London Charivari as a comic, and its chief cartoonists--Richard Doyle, John Leech, John Tenniel, Charles Keene, and George Du Maurier--as comic strip artists.

Interspersed with the Punch exploration are additional chapters on the fascinating political Francophobia/cultural Francophilia of two short comics regarding King Louis Philippe; and on Thomas Onwhyn’s shilling booklet Mr. and Mrs. John Brown’s Visit to London to See the Grand Exposition (1851). The impression given is precisely what Kunzle intends for these middle chapters:  to restore the mid-Victorian period as one of the key historical phases of comic strip art, in which multiple, regular, comic publications appeared to cater for various tastes. The status of the comic strip was enhanced by its association with Punch, at the moment it became a fixture of the establishment. So too it was adapted for other periodicals, such as Town Talk (the subject of Chapter 12) and the Illustrated London News (Chapter 13), as well as other journals, before disappearing after 1870.

But before the Epilogue deals with the sudden fading of the Victorian comic strip (compromised by a new perception that it was “vulgar”), the final substantive chapter (14), picks up on themes that have been of particular interest to the most recent Victorian-age comics scholarship:  the hitherto-neglected career of Marie Duval at Judy, and perspectives from the sesquicentenary of the Franco-Prussian War (1870-1871). For the former, the aforementioned work of Grennan, Sabin, and Waite may be of unsurpassed quality, but it was built on the foundation established by Kunzle himself, who basically discovered Duval back in the 1980s. For the latter, Kunzle was name-checked by a number of scholars attending the May 2021 conference Chroniquer la guerre La Guerre de 1870-1871 dans la presse européenne et atlantique (held online because of COVID, via the École Polytechnique, Université Sorbonne Nouvelle, and Musée de l’Armée). And like the rest of Rebirth, this chapter is not an exercise in resting on one’s laurels, but a further advancement in the interpretation of both comic touchstones. In part, this is due to the acid Kunzle wit:  Bismarck’s Ems telegram is likened to Trumpian “fake news” (403), and the link between the correspondents of 1870 with those in Baghdad or Kabul in more recent years. There does seem to be one slip-up (probably editorial, post-proofing) in misidentifying Judy’s “big cut” artist as William Brunton, not William Boucher (404); but that does not prevent Kunzle from joining a recent push to highlight Boucher’s remarkable body of work (Scully, 2013; Scully, 2018; Grennan, Sabin, and Waite, 2020; Gangnes, 2020).

It is rather striking that the book can be so original despite relying almost entirely on published primary sources. The Punch archives held by the British Library were not consulted for the light they shed on matters such as income, editorial decision-making, and the like, meaning there is still work to be done in this area. Although the expenses of geography and time can account for this omission, the absence of the editors’ copy of Fun, held at the Huntington Library, close to Kunzle’s base of operations, is a little less forgivable. Still, one can really only quibble about the details, as they are not crucial to the overall argument. For instance, from the 1860s, major Punch artists were not paid “£10-20 per major drawing” (xiii), but rather received a salary--Tenniel’s was £853.5s per year in 1875 (Scully, 2018b: 147). True, at Fun, John Gordon Thomson was paid by the drawing, but this was only ever in the realm of £4-6 for a “large cut” cartoon in the 1870s and 1880s (Scully, 2018b: 146). One of Kunzle’s key case-studies--George Du Maurier--spent an inordinate amount of time worrying over the relative incomes of his senior colleagues as early as 1861:  John Leech reportedly earning £1000 a year, and Tenniel £500 (Scully, 2018a: 107).

There are also a few notable omissions from the secondary sources, too. I, for one, would have enjoyed seeing Kunzle weigh-in to the obvious debate with Belgian historian Thierry Smolderen on The Origins of Comics (2014; published in the same Mississippi series). Although complementary, their interpretations differ, but there seems to be very little historiographical engagement with this, more broadly. James Chapman’s complete history of British Comics (2011) also doesn’t merit a mention--but then, Chapman didn’t seem terribly aware of Kunzle’s volumes, either, and just one of his articles on Ally Sloper (261, n14). Indeed, the literature review does not seem itself to be a favored means of contextualizing much comics scholarship. Absent from Kunzle’s Bibliography are also works by Brian Maidment (see above) and Henry Miller (2009a & b), as well as Richard D. Altick’s 1997 study of the early Punch, and (it has to be said) some of my own recent stuff on cartoonists; all of which would provide important context, if not being of direct relevance to the comic strip itself. That the scholarly literature is still somewhat disjointed and disconnected is underscored by Kunzle’s own observation (444, n6) that his work on Marie Duval--amounting to three articles (1985; 1986a; 1986b) and copious references in The Nineteenth Century (1990)--was largely ignored by the late Denis Gifford in writing an entry on the “Ally Sloper group” for the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (2004). This is something that Kunzle--perhaps in partnership with Grennan, Sabin, and Waite--should address.

One does also wonder why Kunzle did not revisit aspects of his earlier work that would have benefited from a second opinion, modified by the passage of time. Looking back to 1990, and The Nineteenth Century, one is struck by the absence in Rebirth of a chapter updating Kunzle’s work on James Sullivan, Fun, and “The British Working Man” (spanning pages 324-329 of the earlier volume). The Huntington Library copy of Fun would provide some very interesting new material for such a study; as would the only substantial work to have been based on that primary source:  E. S. Lauterbach’s doctoral thesis (completed at Urbana, Illinois in 1961). But, as Kunzle notes himself, one can only do so much, and there is not always much point in revisiting the past when trying to drive forward.

Speaking of the past, though; for someone like me, I’m most cheered by the fact that Kunzle has always--unashamedly--written history (as opposed to critique, commentary, or other, jargonistic or theory-heavy analytical forms from the literary or cultural studies world). Without the scholarly weight of his works to point to, I’d probably have been laughed-out of one too many seminars--and possibly a job--long ago. As an art historian, however, Kunzle is permitted to be more critical when it comes to the aesthetic merits of his subject-matter than the “straight” historian. And this is evident as he closes his volume with a riposte to the Punch tradition of comic art:

 

Punch’s reputation had declined [by the 1890s], having become tired and repetitive… [It] persisted through to the end of the century and beyond, in the endless, dreary perambulation of academically drawn illustrated jokes, with captions featuring the witty and the witless, the fatuous infelicity and the verbal faux pas [433].

 

Reputations are difficult things to track, historically. And Kunzle doesn’t offer any evidence for this perceived decline, which is important, given this was a time when the circulation figures were exceeding 80-90,000 per week (Scully, 2018, I: 18), and its status had been cemented by The History of “Punch” (1895) from M. H. Spielmann (a great arbiter of taste). Certainly, its fin de siècle content is unattractive to the radical sensibility, and Kunzle joins Sir David Low in criticizing it for staidness (Scully, 2018, I: 15). But Punch was hugely popular in its time and of its class; and any diminution of its quality is a subjective, anachronistic one, from the perspective of the 21st Century and the focus on the comic strip.

But Kunzle’s opinion of Punch in part a lament, rather than outright criticism, for in eschewing the comic strip, the London Charivari left that medium to its lower-class rivals--although Kunzle dismisses the notion of any true rivalry (434). Between 1870 and the Edwardian period, Will o’ the Wisp, Judy, Fun, Pick-Me-Up, Funny Folks, Scraps, Illustrated Bits, and Comic Cuts witnessed the “vulgarization” of the comic periodical, and in cheapening the fare to be had by British readers, “it would take generations before the comic strip and comic books could rise from the reputational miasma of the late nineteenth and early twentieth century” (435). A harsh assessment indeed, especially given Judy probably entered a definite, post-Sloperian “Golden Age” in the 1890s (Scully, 2018, II: 83-84). Fun did decline in the later 1890s, and expired in 1901; Funny Folks folded in 1894. But Pick-Me-Up was a glossy and glorious product of the “Naughty Nineties,” despite its obvious piracy from Continental counterparts; hardly of a kind with the cheap-and-nasty Scraps, Illustrated Bits, and Comic Cuts (something evident from their very names). If one steps-back and applies a less aesthetic set of judgments, then what Kunzle identifies here is precisely what he spotted occurring in the 1830s (1983):  the material change of medium that accompanies a seismic shift in the history of the cartoon and comic. The “graphic bric-a-brac”--in his own, memorable phrasing (Kunzle, 1990: 20)--of the late Regency/early Victorian period finds its counterpart in these comics, which were experimental publishing forms, deserving of less judgmental assessment, and appreciation for what they were, not the later standards they failed to attain.

There is thus an opportunity here to challenge Kunzle’s assessment of the late-Victorian/Edwardian comic paper, just as Brian Maidment (2018: 54) and others have done for his assessment of the beginning of that period. Aspiring scholars should probably get their skates on, though. As Kunzle points out, the very cheapness of the Harmsworth/Northcliffe Comic Cuts presents a major problem for the historian of a century later:

 

in consulting Comic Cuts of this period… I found the danger not so much the bleeding through of the ink onto the reverse side (as shown on p. 369), not so much the occasional indecipherability, but the acidic disintegration of whole pages, as I turned them into a shower of confetti (435).

 

A timely reminder in our digital age of the need to preserve the archive, but also to consult the material culture, not merely its facsimile.

In an earlier age, in 1973 and 1990, comics studies was of fringe interest; edgy; even subversive. And Kunzle’s radical credentials were reinforced by his choice of subject-matter. For years we have been weaning ourselves off the need to bemoan the “neglectedness” of our field, because today, it is no longer the poor cousin in the Literature and Media/Cultural Studies departments, nor even a minor area of study. It is probably the fastest-growing field in the Humanities, if not quite yet a nascent discipline of its own.1 Rebirth is not a standalone curiosity, but a handsomely-produced, well-edited, contribution to Mississippi’s Comics Studies series--some 162 volumes to date--which is itself just one of a number of series devoted to the field (including those of Palgrave, Routledge, Bloomsbury, Ohio State, Nebraska, and more). Kunzle’s work across six decades is one of the key reasons for the all-conquering strength of the field and, appropriately, Rebirth brings us not only full circle, but opens up new vistas for the future.

 

 

 

References

 

Altick, Richard D. 1997. Punch:  the Lively Youth of a British Institution, 1841-1851. Columbus:  Ohio State University Press.

Burn, W. L. 1964. The Age of Equipoise:  A Study of the Mid-Victorian Generation. London:  George Allen & Unwin.

Chapman, James. 2011. British Comics:  A Cultural History. London:  Reaktion.

Connerty, Michael. 2021. “Book Review:  Marie Duval:  Maverick Victorian Cartoonist, by Simon Grennan, Roger Sabin, and Julian Waite, Manchester University Press, 2020, 272 pp.” Journal of Graphic Novels and Comics. Published online May 11, 2021.

Connerty, Michael. 2021. The Comic Strip Art of Jack B. Yeats. Cham (Switzerland):  Palgrave.

Gangnes, Madeline B. 2020. “Material Romance:  Kidnapped In and Out of Young Folks Paper.” Victorian Periodicals Review 53 (2): 183-213.

Gifford, Denis. 2004. “Ally Sloper Group (act. 1867-1923).” Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford: Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/ref:odnb/66301>. Accessed Nov. 15, 2021.

Grennan, Simon, Roger Sabin, and Julian Waite. 2020. Marie Duval:  Maverick Victorian Cartoonist. Manchester:  Manchester University Press.

Haywood, Ian. 2020. The Rise of Victorian Caricature. Cham:  Palgrave Macmillan.

Kunzle, David. 1973. The Early Comic Strip:  Narrative Strips and Picture Stories in the European Broadsheet from c. 1450 to 1825. Berkeley and London:  University of California Press.

Kunzle, David. 1983. “Between Broadsheet Caricature and Punch:  Cheap Newspaper Cuts for the Lower Classes in the 1830s.” Art Journal 4 (43): 339-346.

Kunzle, David. 1985. “The First Ally Sloper:  The Earliest Popular Cartoon Character as a Satire on the Victorian Work Ethic.” Oxford Art Journal 8 (1): 40–48.

Kunzle, David. 1986a. “Marie Duval and Ally Sloper.” History Workshop Journal 21 (1): 133-140.

Kunzle, David. 1986b. “Marie Duval--Caricaturist Rediscovered.” Woman’s Art Journal 7 (1): 26-31.

Kunzle, David. 1990. The History of the Comic Strip, Vol. II:  The Nineteenth Century. Berkeley and Los Angeles:  University of California Press.

Kunzle, David. 2007a. ed. Rodolphe Töpffer:  The Complete Comic Strips. Jackson:  University Press of Mississippi.

Kunzle, David. 2007b. Father of the Comic Strip:  Rodolphe Töpffer. Jackson:  University Press of Mississippi.

Leary, Patrick, The Punch Brotherhood:  Table Talk and Print Culture in Mid-Victorian London. London:  The British Library.

Maidment, Brian. 2013a. “The Presence of Punch in the Nineteenth Century.” In Asian Punches:  A Transcultural Affair, edited by Hans Harder and Barbara Mittler, pp.15-44. New York & Heidelberg.

Maidment, Brian. 2013b. Comedy, Caricature and the Social Order, 1820-50. Manchester:  Manchester University Press.

Maidment, Brian. 2018. “Caricature and the Comic Image in the 1830s.” The Yearbook of English Studies 48:  Writing in the Age of William IV, pp. 54-81.

Maidment, Brian. 2021. Robert Seymour and Nineteenth-Century Print Culture--Sketches by Seymour and Comic Illustration. London: Routledge.

Miller, Henry J. 2009a. “John Leech and the Shaping of the Victorian Cartoon:  The Context of Respectability.” Victorian Periodicals Review 42 (3): 267-291.

Miller, Henry. 2009b. “The Problem with Punch.” Historical Research 82 (216): 285-302.

Morris, Frankie. 2005. Artist of Wonderland:  The Life, Political Cartoons, and Illustrations of Tenniel. Charlottesville:  University of Virginia Press.

Patten, Robert L. 1992. George Cruikshank's Life, Times, and Art--Volume 1:  1792-1835. Cambridge:  Lutterworth.

Patten, Robert L. 1996. George Cruikshank's Life, Times, and Art--Volume 2:  1835-1878.  Cambridge:  Lutterworth.

Scully, Richard. 2013. “William Henry Boucher (1837-1906):  Illustrator and Judy Cartoonist.” Victorian Periodicals Review 46 (4): 441-474.

Scully, Richard. 2018. Eminent Victorian Cartoonists. 3 volumes. London:  The Political Cartoon Society.

Smolderen, Thierry. 2014. The Origins of Comics:  From William Hogarth to Winsor McCay. Bart Beaty and Nick Nguyen (trans.). Jackson:  University Press of Mississippi.

Spielmann, M. H. 1895. The History of “Punch.” London:  Cassell & Co.

 

 

 

_________________________

1 My appraisal of the evolution of the field is paraphrased (if not plagiarised, unashamedly!) from Roger Sabin’s joyful editors’ preface to Palgrave’s “Studies in Comics and Graphic Novels” series.