Britannia : Grandeur et infortune d’une allégorie nationale dans l’univers du cartoon britannique 1842-1999

Britannia, sometimes accompanied by the emblematic British Lion, has long been personifying justice, liberty, and the British Empire on coins and stamps as well as in graphic satire. Originally of Roman origin, she became the visual representation of Britain after being revived in the sixteenth cent...

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Main Author: Gilbert Millat
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Presses universitaires de Rennes 2003-01-01
Series:Revue LISA
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/lisa/3109
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author Gilbert Millat
author_facet Gilbert Millat
author_sort Gilbert Millat
collection DOAJ
description Britannia, sometimes accompanied by the emblematic British Lion, has long been personifying justice, liberty, and the British Empire on coins and stamps as well as in graphic satire. Originally of Roman origin, she became the visual representation of Britain after being revived in the sixteenth century. This article is based on the analysis of over four hundred cartoons featuring this symbol. It argues that between 1860 and the 1950s, Britannia striking a solemn pose, that of the Græco-Roman goddess created by Tenniel, exalted Victorian greatness and the early twentieth century great power twice victorious in the World Wars. On the other hand, since the inter-war years, Low and his followers had been challenging this supposedly immutable image. They turned her into a definitely helpless and obsolete symbol whose identity was sometimes usurped by such anti-heroes as Colonel Blimp. Finally, from the 1960s, in a context of continuous British decline and growing permissiveness, cartoonists increasingly followed the example of the old masters of 18th century caricature and early Punch cartoonists, even though aggressiveness and vulgarity have remained much less explicit.
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spelling doaj-art-8aa5e62fb68143fa9e2371e4d2de0c272025-01-06T09:04:00ZengPresses universitaires de RennesRevue LISA1762-61532003-01-01142310.4000/lisa.3109Britannia : Grandeur et infortune d’une allégorie nationale dans l’univers du cartoon britannique 1842-1999Gilbert MillatBritannia, sometimes accompanied by the emblematic British Lion, has long been personifying justice, liberty, and the British Empire on coins and stamps as well as in graphic satire. Originally of Roman origin, she became the visual representation of Britain after being revived in the sixteenth century. This article is based on the analysis of over four hundred cartoons featuring this symbol. It argues that between 1860 and the 1950s, Britannia striking a solemn pose, that of the Græco-Roman goddess created by Tenniel, exalted Victorian greatness and the early twentieth century great power twice victorious in the World Wars. On the other hand, since the inter-war years, Low and his followers had been challenging this supposedly immutable image. They turned her into a definitely helpless and obsolete symbol whose identity was sometimes usurped by such anti-heroes as Colonel Blimp. Finally, from the 1960s, in a context of continuous British decline and growing permissiveness, cartoonists increasingly followed the example of the old masters of 18th century caricature and early Punch cartoonists, even though aggressiveness and vulgarity have remained much less explicit.https://journals.openedition.org/lisa/3109
spellingShingle Gilbert Millat
Britannia : Grandeur et infortune d’une allégorie nationale dans l’univers du cartoon britannique 1842-1999
Revue LISA
title Britannia : Grandeur et infortune d’une allégorie nationale dans l’univers du cartoon britannique 1842-1999
title_full Britannia : Grandeur et infortune d’une allégorie nationale dans l’univers du cartoon britannique 1842-1999
title_fullStr Britannia : Grandeur et infortune d’une allégorie nationale dans l’univers du cartoon britannique 1842-1999
title_full_unstemmed Britannia : Grandeur et infortune d’une allégorie nationale dans l’univers du cartoon britannique 1842-1999
title_short Britannia : Grandeur et infortune d’une allégorie nationale dans l’univers du cartoon britannique 1842-1999
title_sort britannia grandeur et infortune d une allegorie nationale dans l univers du cartoon britannique 1842 1999
url https://journals.openedition.org/lisa/3109
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