This article examines the scientific content of the most famous comic journal of the Victorian period: Punch. Concentrating on the first three decades of the periodical (1841–1871), I show that Punch usually engaged with science that was highly topical, of consequence to the lives of its bourgeois readers, and suitable for comic interpretation. But Punch's satire of scientific topics was highly complex. It often contained allusions to non-scientific topics, and its engagement with science ranged from the utterly comic to the sharply critical. Punch prompted readers to think as well as laugh about science, and probably shaped their scientific education more than we think.Leverhulme Trus
In the mid 1830s, the engraver Ebenezer Landells and the journalist Henry Mayhew began discussions a...
The Work of Playful Science in Nineteenth-Century Britain evaluates the function of play in nineteen...
This article examines three cartoons produced in the Victorian comic magazine Punch by its chief car...
© Cambridge University Press 2004. Published version reproduced with the permission of the publisher...
Public interest in science is often thought to have been much greater in the nineteenth century than...
© 'Culture and Science in the Nineteenth-Century Media', Louise Henson, Geoffrey Cantor, Gowan Dawso...
Cambridge Studies in Nineteenth-Century Literature and Culture No. 45Copyright © 2004 Cambridge Univ...
publication-status: Publishedtypes: ArticleThis is a post-print version of an article published in N...
International audienceLaunched in 1841 as a radical magazine championing the poor and dispossessed, ...
Periodicals offer a wonderful guide to the Victorian age, and to the ways in which science entered i...
The craze for natural history in the Victorian era was accompanied by widespread interest in questio...
International audienceThis article investigates the Punch Pocket Book, a calendar and notebook sold ...
International audienceThis article investigates the Punch Pocket Book, a calendar and notebook sold ...
It is the purpose of this thesis, by analysing the context of public health reform in the nineteenth...
The development of printing techniques in Europe during the 19th century promoted the spread of jour...
In the mid 1830s, the engraver Ebenezer Landells and the journalist Henry Mayhew began discussions a...
The Work of Playful Science in Nineteenth-Century Britain evaluates the function of play in nineteen...
This article examines three cartoons produced in the Victorian comic magazine Punch by its chief car...
© Cambridge University Press 2004. Published version reproduced with the permission of the publisher...
Public interest in science is often thought to have been much greater in the nineteenth century than...
© 'Culture and Science in the Nineteenth-Century Media', Louise Henson, Geoffrey Cantor, Gowan Dawso...
Cambridge Studies in Nineteenth-Century Literature and Culture No. 45Copyright © 2004 Cambridge Univ...
publication-status: Publishedtypes: ArticleThis is a post-print version of an article published in N...
International audienceLaunched in 1841 as a radical magazine championing the poor and dispossessed, ...
Periodicals offer a wonderful guide to the Victorian age, and to the ways in which science entered i...
The craze for natural history in the Victorian era was accompanied by widespread interest in questio...
International audienceThis article investigates the Punch Pocket Book, a calendar and notebook sold ...
International audienceThis article investigates the Punch Pocket Book, a calendar and notebook sold ...
It is the purpose of this thesis, by analysing the context of public health reform in the nineteenth...
The development of printing techniques in Europe during the 19th century promoted the spread of jour...
In the mid 1830s, the engraver Ebenezer Landells and the journalist Henry Mayhew began discussions a...
The Work of Playful Science in Nineteenth-Century Britain evaluates the function of play in nineteen...
This article examines three cartoons produced in the Victorian comic magazine Punch by its chief car...