Punch (magazine)

From Free net encyclopedia

(Redirected from Punch Magazine)

Image:Punch.jpg Punch was a British weekly magazine of humour and satire published from 1841 to 1992 and from 1996 to 2002.

It was founded in July 17, 1841 by Henry Mayhew and engraver Ebenezer Landells. At its founding, it was subtitled The London Charivari, a reference to a satirical humour magazine published in France under the title Le Charivari. Reflecting their satiric and humorous intent, they took for their name and masthead the anarchic glove puppet, Mr. Punch; the name also referred to a joke made early on about the magazine's first editor, Mark Lemon, that "punch is nothing without lemon." Punch was responsible for the modern use of the word 'cartoon' to refer to a comic drawing. The illustrator Archibald Henning designed the cover of the magazine's first issues. The cover design varied in the early years, though Richard Doyle designed what became the magazine's masthead in 1849.

The magazine, reflecting the British zeitgeist, was inveterately racist towards non-British peoples. The Irish were caricatured as simian savages incapable of civilization.

Circulation peaked during the 1940s when it reached 175,000, but slowly declined over the years, until the magazine was forced to close in 1992 after 150 years of publication.

Contents

1996 resurrection

In early 1996, the controversial Egyptian businessman Mohamed Al-Fayed bought the rights to the name, and it was re-launched later that year. The magazine never became profitable in its new incarnation, and at the end of May 2002, it was announced that Punch would once more cease publication. Press reports at the time quoted a total loss to its owner of some £16 million (about $28 million U.S.) over the six years of publication, with only 6,000 subscribers at the end.

Contributors

Image:PunchMagazineMeeting.jpg Editors of Punch during its first 150 years were:

Cartoonists who worked for the magazine include Murray Ball, John Leech, Edward Linley Sambourne, John Tenniel, Norman Thelwell, Gerald Curtis Delano and George du Maurier.

Notable authors who contributed at one time or another include Kingsley Amis, John Betjeman, Willard R. Espy, A. P. Herbert, George du Maurier, John McCrae, A. A. Milne, Anthony Powell, W. C. Sellar and R. J. Yeatman, Thackeray, Sir Henry Lucy, Artemus Ward, and P.G. Wodehouse.

Trivia

External links

Template:Wikiquote

ja:パンチ (雑誌) fi:Punch sv:Punch fr:Punch (magazine)