Africans in English caricature,1769-1819: Black jokes, White humour
2017 (English)Book (Other academic)
Abstract [en]
Between 1769 and 1819 London experienced an unprecedented growth in the proliferation of texts and images in the popular sphere, engaging learned citizens in discussion and commentary on the most pressing social and political issues of the day. From the repeal of the Stamp Act to the French revolution, the local Westminster election or the abolition of the slave trade, these prints, political pamphlets, plays, novels and periodicals collaborated (sometimes intentionally) in critique, praise and assessment of the country's changing socio-economic climate. African people were a critical aspect of this world of images, and their presence conveyed much about the implications of travel, colonialism and slavery on the collective psyche. Whether encountered on the streets of the city, in opulent stately homes, or in tracts describing the horrors of the slave trade, the British paid attention to Africans (consciously or not), and developed a means of expressing the impact of these encounters through images. Scholarship has begun to interrogate the presence of Africans in British art of this period, but very little has been written about their place in visual and literary humour created in a metropolitan context. This book fills this scholarly lacuna, exploring how and why satirical artists both mocked and utilized these characters as subversive comic weaponry.
Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Harvey Miller Publishers, 2017. , p. 223
Keywords [en]
caricature, Art History, 18th century, Race, Racism, Humour, print culture, England, iconography, Black presence, cultural history, archives, visual culture, Africans in art, Blackness
National Category
Humanities and the Arts
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:mau:diva-7969Local ID: 24976ISBN: 978-1-909400-50-4 OAI: oai:DiVA.org:mau-7969DiVA, id: diva2:1404951
2020-02-282020-02-282022-06-27Bibliographically approved