Image for Queen Caroline and the Power of Caricature in Georgian England

Queen Caroline and the Power of Caricature in Georgian England

Part of the Queenship and Power series
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This book will be the first dedicated study of the remarkable role of Georgian caricature in the equally remarkable Queen Caroline controversy of 1820-21. When the newly crowned George IV, formerly the Prince of Wales, refused to recognise his estranged wife Caroline as the rightful queen of the Britain, her refusal to rescind her claim to the throne provoked a huge campaign of sympathy and support that almost toppled the government. The British people rallied round the 'injured' queen in their hundreds of thousands, and massed rallies, processions, protests and petitioning became daily news.


The Queen Caroline controversy was the zenith of the 'Golden Age' of caricature, a tour-de-force of imagination, wit, inventiveness and sheer political mischief. In image after image, Caroline triumphs over her cowardly and conniving enemies, subverting gender and political hierarchies, and giving a presence and voice to her unenfranchised followers. This book therefore aims to chronicle and analyse this achievement. 

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£34.99
Product Details
Palgrave Macmillan
3031462246 / 9783031462245
eBook (EPUB)
941.074
27/11/2023
Switzerland
English
1 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%
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