‘Gall and wormwood’ – The Compositors’ Chronicle (1840–43) as Collaborative Journal

Printed and published by the London Union of Compositors, an organisation founded in 1834 to defend the interests of print workers, The Compositors’ Chronicle was launched in September 1840 as a monthly and existed for three years. Its main object was to protect printers from their masters’ ‘miscond...

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Main Author: Françoise Baillet
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Presses Universitaires de la Méditerranée 2022-03-01
Series:Cahiers Victoriens et Edouardiens
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Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/cve/11036
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author Françoise Baillet
author_facet Françoise Baillet
author_sort Françoise Baillet
collection DOAJ
description Printed and published by the London Union of Compositors, an organisation founded in 1834 to defend the interests of print workers, The Compositors’ Chronicle was launched in September 1840 as a monthly and existed for three years. Its main object was to protect printers from their masters’ ‘misconduct and tyranny’: ‘To these petty tyrants, the Chronicle will be gall and wormwood; and, by occasionally giving them a friendly hint, we shall endeavour to make them more considerate rulers, if not better men’ (‘Address’). This paper investigates the Chronicle as a cooperative medium seeking to support and sustain the development of a shared professional trade identity. It provides three successive highlights on different fields and modes of expression used in the Chronicle, paying attention to the connectedness of printers, within and outside the editorial structure of the journal. The Chronicle is first considered in its attempt to unite typesetters and pressmen across Britain in the fight against perceived threats to their working conditions and status. However, and beyond immediate trade interests, wider ideological networks also nourished the journal. Like many early Victorian trade societies, the London Union of Compositors was strongly influenced by the various movements ‘for the improvement of the moral and social condition of the working classes’ and in the pages of the Chronicle, utilitarian connections were apparent, in particular through the journal’s treatment of social subjects. Finally, the collaborative columns of the Chronicle were also instrumental in the creation of a distinct trade identity. At a time when many print workers remained outside the scope of British citizenship, Thompson’s journal offered them a space in which their literacy, sociability and respectability could be showcased through a virtual and actual community.
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spelling doaj-art-52331c713f644bba883100a4f002bf562025-01-30T10:20:52ZengPresses Universitaires de la MéditerranéeCahiers Victoriens et Edouardiens0220-56102271-61492022-03-019510.4000/cve.11036‘Gall and wormwood’ – The Compositors’ Chronicle (1840–43) as Collaborative JournalFrançoise BailletPrinted and published by the London Union of Compositors, an organisation founded in 1834 to defend the interests of print workers, The Compositors’ Chronicle was launched in September 1840 as a monthly and existed for three years. Its main object was to protect printers from their masters’ ‘misconduct and tyranny’: ‘To these petty tyrants, the Chronicle will be gall and wormwood; and, by occasionally giving them a friendly hint, we shall endeavour to make them more considerate rulers, if not better men’ (‘Address’). This paper investigates the Chronicle as a cooperative medium seeking to support and sustain the development of a shared professional trade identity. It provides three successive highlights on different fields and modes of expression used in the Chronicle, paying attention to the connectedness of printers, within and outside the editorial structure of the journal. The Chronicle is first considered in its attempt to unite typesetters and pressmen across Britain in the fight against perceived threats to their working conditions and status. However, and beyond immediate trade interests, wider ideological networks also nourished the journal. Like many early Victorian trade societies, the London Union of Compositors was strongly influenced by the various movements ‘for the improvement of the moral and social condition of the working classes’ and in the pages of the Chronicle, utilitarian connections were apparent, in particular through the journal’s treatment of social subjects. Finally, the collaborative columns of the Chronicle were also instrumental in the creation of a distinct trade identity. At a time when many print workers remained outside the scope of British citizenship, Thompson’s journal offered them a space in which their literacy, sociability and respectability could be showcased through a virtual and actual community.https://journals.openedition.org/cve/11036poetryperiodical presssocial historytrade pressunionismwomen at work
spellingShingle Françoise Baillet
‘Gall and wormwood’ – The Compositors’ Chronicle (1840–43) as Collaborative Journal
Cahiers Victoriens et Edouardiens
poetry
periodical press
social history
trade press
unionism
women at work
title ‘Gall and wormwood’ – The Compositors’ Chronicle (1840–43) as Collaborative Journal
title_full ‘Gall and wormwood’ – The Compositors’ Chronicle (1840–43) as Collaborative Journal
title_fullStr ‘Gall and wormwood’ – The Compositors’ Chronicle (1840–43) as Collaborative Journal
title_full_unstemmed ‘Gall and wormwood’ – The Compositors’ Chronicle (1840–43) as Collaborative Journal
title_short ‘Gall and wormwood’ – The Compositors’ Chronicle (1840–43) as Collaborative Journal
title_sort gall and wormwood the compositors chronicle 1840 43 as collaborative journal
topic poetry
periodical press
social history
trade press
unionism
women at work
url https://journals.openedition.org/cve/11036
work_keys_str_mv AT francoisebaillet gallandwormwoodthecompositorschronicle184043ascollaborativejournal