The #DigitalPicket deserves a #DigitalPlacard! I'm pinning this tweet for the duration of the #UCUStrike and won't be posting anything about my research until the strike ends.
I've also got a #DigitalPlacard up on my @VictorianHumour account, which won't post any more nineteenth-century jokes until the #UCUstike is over (please don't think too much about whether this is a bad thing...).
@VictorianHumour Join me by pinning your own #DigitalPlacard! They're fun to make, particularly if (like me) you're better with photoshop than with a felt tip pen. #UCUStrike
In 1892, Answers magazine ran a competition inviting readers to explain the things that would make them happy. Lot of people dreamed of money and a country estate, but not this girl...
Pity the 'little wife' who gets trapped in this man's fantasy
In 1892, Answers magazine published an article predicting what the news would be like in a hundred years's time. Let's see how the Victorians imagined the 90s...
Thread 👇👇👇
Firstly, they accurately predicted the arrival of broadcast news! Or, at least, that it would be 'read out' to audiences thanks to the perfection of Edison's phonograph.
/2
Their prediction about commercially saleable weather is perhaps still a *bit* sci-fi, but they were right about Britain adopting the decimal system. For now, at least. 🙄
/3
All of @galecengage's newspaper archives — e.g. The Times, Daily Mail, British Library Newspapers — have a built-in 'Term Frequency' search tool. You can access it at the foot of the archive's home page. /1
This allows us to 'distant read' the archive by graphing how often a particular word or phrase appeared each year. It's similar to google's ngram tool (books.google.com/ngrams) but for newspapers! /2
This is a really useful tool for historical research. You can use it to map (potential) historical trends, highlight (potential) moments of change or significance, or just check to see when a particular term was in circulation. I use it a lot. /3
In 1891, the Illustrated Police News published these reactionary cartoons bemoaning what they regarded as women's growing power to accuse men of sexual/romantic misconduct. There are striking parallels here with more recent responses to movements like #MeToo and #TimesUp.
This panel, for instance, ridicules the idea of men being publicly shamed by women.
These panels remind me of men who now say things like, "you know, you can't even LOOK at a woman in public these days without being ACCUSED of something."
When notable Victorian murderers were sent to the gallows, the Illustrated Police News often printed vivid front-page illustrations imagining their tortured dreams on 'the night before the execution.'
Kate Webster was a maid who murdered & dismembered her mistress.
(1879)
The imagined dreams of Charles Peace — infamous Victorian burglar and murderer — on the night before his execution.
— Illustrated Police News (1879)
Another set of pre-execution dreams, this time attributed to Percy Lefroy Mapleton, who robbed and murdered a coin dealer named Isaac Gold on the London to Brighton train. (1881)
Spring is in the air, and I'm reading a Victorian newspaper devoted to adultery. Here, a 'guilty pair' of lovers are spotted playing a red-hot game of whist!
- The Crim-Con Gazette (1839)
My favourite thing about these illustrations is always the face of the person observing the adulterers...