Colin Seymour-Ure
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This chapter begins by looking at Gould’s contemporaries and seeing how far he can be fitted into the Victorian tradition of Punch, focusing on the work of John Tenniel, Bernard Partridge, E.T. Reed and especially Harry Furniss. The author then goes on to look at the emerging political cartoonists of the new popular press, and examines how and why the political cartoonist’s style starts to change in these mass-market publications. In this context he first discusses the Daily Mail and the Daily Express and later gives particular attention to W.K. Haselden on the Daily Mirror, the Australian Will Dyson on the Daily Herald and the New Zealander David Low on the Star (and later the Evening Standard).

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The picture politics of Sir Francis Carruthers Gould

Britain’s pioneering political cartoonist

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