Criticism > Nineteenth-Century Literary Criticism > Victorian Illustrated Fiction - Ronald Paulson (essay date 1973)
Victorian Illustrated Fiction - Ronald Paulson (essay date 1973)
Ronald Paulson (essay date 1973)
SOURCE: Paulson, Ronald. “The Tradition of Comic Illustration from Hogarth to Cruikshank.” Princeton University Library Chronicle 35, nos. 1-2 (1973): 35-60.
[In the following essay, Paulson describes the influence of Hogarth and Rowlandson on Victorian illustration. Paulson suggests that in some cases literary illustration stands as a text of its own, while in other cases illustrations function as a kind of commentary or interpretation of the verbal text.]
I
Sophisticated analysis of book illustration is a recent development, with most attention going to a few special cases like Blake's dynamic marriage of illustration and text in his printed works.1 Another special case, which is my starting point in this essay, is the illustrations for Dickens' novels. Essays by Michael Steig, Robert L. Pattern, and others have shown that subtle textual interpretations are contained therein and...
[The entire page is 10623 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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