Criticism > Nineteenth-Century Literary Criticism > Victorian Illustrated Fiction - Michael Steig (essay date 1969)
Victorian Illustrated Fiction - Michael Steig (essay date 1969)
Michael Steig (essay date 1969)
SOURCE: Steig, Michael. “Dickens, Hablôt Browne, and the Tradition of English Caricature.” Criticism 11 (1969): 219-33.
[In the following essay, Steig argues that Dickens's novels provide an overall model for observing the development of literary illustration, focusing his discussion on the novels illustrated by Hablôt Browne.]
Since the word “caricature” has so often been applied to Dickens' literary methods, Dickens' own attitude toward caricature is of considerable interest. Writing in 1848, Dickens called his friend and contemporary, John Leech, “the very first English caricaturist (we use the word for want of a better) who has considered beauty as being perfectly compatible with his art,” and contrasted him with earlier English graphic humorists:
If we turn back to … the works of Rowlandson or Gillray, we shall find, in spite of the great humour displayed in many of...
[The entire page is 6560 words long]
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- Introduction
- Representative Works
- Criticism: Overviews And Development
- Criticism: Technical And Material Aspects Of Book Illustration
- Criticism: Charles Dickens And His Illustrators
- Criticism: William Makepeace Thackeray
- Criticism: George Eliot And Frederic Leighton
- Criticism: Lewis Carroll And John Tenniel
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