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Dominion Cartoon Satire as Trench Culture Narratives: Complaints,Endurance and Stoicism
Authors:Jane Chapman  Dan Ellin
Institution:1. Lincoln University and Research Associate Wolfson College Cambridge, Cambridge, UKjlc69@cam.ac.uk;3. Warwick University, Warwick, UK
Abstract:Abstract

Although Dominion soldiers’ Great War field publications are relatively well known, the way troops created cartoon multi-panel formats in some of them has been neglected as a record of satirical social observation. Visual narrative humour provides a ‘bottom-up’ perspective for journalistic observations that in many cases capture the spirit of the army in terms of stoicism, buoyed by a culture of internal complaints. Troop concerns expressed in the early comic strips of Australians, Canadians, New Zealanders and British were similar. They shared a collective editorial purpose of morale boosting among the ranks through the use of everyday narratives that elevated the anti-heroism of the citizen soldier, portrayed as a transnational everyman in the service of empire. The regenerative value of disparagement humour provided a redefinition of courage as the very act of endurance on the Western Front.
Keywords:First World War  Canadian  Australian  New Zealander  trench culture  cartoons  trench newspapers  humour  courage  Western Front
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