Abstract
AbstractFocusing on A smoking club (1793/7) by James Gillray, this essay presents satiric representations of smoking clubs in late eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century British prints, arguing that they reflect and mediate contemporary understandings of tobacco as an intoxicant in British associational life. The breadth of potential cultural connotations – from political and social parody to light-hearted humour – is traced through the content and imagery of selected prints. These prints rely on the familiarity of contemporary audiences with political and social knowledge, as well as a visual iconography iconically realized in William Hogarth's A midnight modern conversation (1732).
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Reference24 articles.
1. Occasional politeness and gentlemen's laughter in 18th c England;Davison;Historical Journal,2014
2. Making Hogarth Heritage
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1 articles.
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