Colin Seymour-Ure
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Beyond the newspaper cartoon
Gould at large
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In this chapter the author examines in detail Gould’s contributions to three periodicals as well as his relationship to their owners: Henry Labouchère’s Truth (1879–95); Thomas Gibson Bowles’s Vanity Fair (1879, 1890–99); and George Newnes’s The Strand Magazine (1893–1902). There then follows a discussion of Gould’s parodies and pastiches. The first two were inspired by Lewis Carroll and John Tenniel’s ‘Alice’ books: The Westminster Alice (1900–2), with a text by ‘Saki’ (H.H. Munro); and John Bull’s Adventures in the Fiscal Wonderland (1903), with a text by Charles Geake. Then come the three political versions of Dr Heinrich Hoffman’s German comic book Struwwelpeter. These were The Political Struwwelpeter (1899), The Struwwelpeter Alphabet (1900) and Great Men (1901), each with texts by E.H. Begbie. Finally comes an examination of Gould’s own three-volume version of the works of Sir John Froissart’s medieval chronicles, entitled Froissart’s Modern Chronicles (1902, 1903, 1908), which tell the tale of recent political events as if they had happened in the fourteenth century.

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The picture politics of Sir Francis Carruthers Gould

Britain’s pioneering political cartoonist

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