The Birth of Modern Political Satire - Meredith McNeill Hale

The Birth of Modern Political Satire

Romeyn de Hooghe and the Glorious Revolution
Buch | Hardcover
300 Seiten
2020
Oxford University Press (Verlag)
978-0-19-883626-1 (ISBN)
118,45 inkl. MwSt
Meredith M. Hale presents the first chapter in the history of modern political satire, one that is critical to the media's emergence as the 'fourth estate'. Discussing themes relevant today, the study locates Dutch printmaker Romeyn de Hooghe (1645-1708) at the birth of modern political satire, and political satire at the heart of the modern media.
Political satire has been a primary weapon of the press since the eighteenth century and is still intimately associated with one of the most important values of western democratic society: the right of individuals to free speech. This study documents one of the most important moments in the history of printed political imagery, when political print became what we would recognise as modern political satire. Contrary to conventional historical and art historical narratives, which place the emergence of political satire in the news-driven coffee-house culture of eighteenth-century London, Meredith M. Hale locates the birth of the genre in the late seventeenth-century Netherlands in the contentious political milieu surrounding William III's invasion of England known as the 'Glorious Revolution'. The satires produced between 1688 and 1690 by the Dutch printmaker Romeyn de Hooghe on the events surrounding William III's campaigns against James II and Louis XIV establish many of the qualities that define the genre to this day: the transgression of bodily boundaries; the interdependence of text and image; the centrality of dialogic text to the generation of meaning; serialized production; and the emergence of the satirist as a primary participant in political discourse. This study, the first in-depth analysis of De Hooghe's satires since the nineteenth century, considers these prints as sites of cultural influence and negotiation, works that both reflected and helped to construct a new relationship between the government and the governed.

Meredith M. Hale received her PhD from Columbia University in New York and was awarded the Samuel H. Kress Fellowship at the Center for Advanced Study in the Visual Arts, National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC and the Andrew W. Mellon Fellowship at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. She worked as a Senior Specialist in Old Master Paintings at Christie's New York before taking up the Speelman Fellowship at Wolfson College, Cambridge, from 2009 to 2018. She joined the University of Exeter as a Lecturer in Art History and Visual Culture in 2019.

1: Introduction. The Birth of Modern Satire: Romeyn de Hooghe (1645-1708) and the Glorious Revolution
2: The Roots of Modern Political Satire
3: Foreign Subjects: The End of the Absolute Monarch
4: Satires on Domestic Subjects: William III and Amsterdam
5: Text, Image, and the Performance of Satire
6: The Role of the Satirist and the Problem of Moral Conviction
7: Conclusion: The Geography of Satire

Erscheinungsdatum
Zusatzinfo 44 black and white figures/illustrations
Verlagsort Oxford
Sprache englisch
Maße 164 x 241 mm
Gewicht 618 g
Themenwelt Kunst / Musik / Theater Kunstgeschichte / Kunststile
Geschichte Allgemeine Geschichte Neuzeit (bis 1918)
Sozialwissenschaften Politik / Verwaltung
ISBN-10 0-19-883626-0 / 0198836260
ISBN-13 978-0-19-883626-1 / 9780198836261
Zustand Neuware
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