where can I find a cartoon representation of mary wollstonecraft as
the "hyena in petticoats," which is the name by which horace walpole
referred to her? If not that, how about madame defarge from dickens's
a tale of two cities as a sharp-toothed hound? or basically any of
the "virago" women of the french revolution? |
Request for Question Clarification by
aceresearcher-ga
on
20 May 2004 12:22 PDT
Greetings, winterte!
When you say "cartoon", do you simply mean hand-drawn, or do you mean
a "caricature", which is a hand-drawn portrait with a person's
features greatly exaggerated?
Regards,
aceresearcher
|
Clarification of Question by
winterte-ga
on
20 May 2004 12:59 PDT
I am looking for cartoons that depict mary wollstonecraft, or any
women from the french revolution.
|
Clarification of Question by
winterte-ga
on
20 May 2004 13:01 PDT
any hand-drawn representation is fine, although a caricature is preferable
|
Greetings, winterte!
A caricature of a virago can be seen here:
http://storm.prohosting.com/jesuo/virago.gif
Two excellent French-Revolution era drawings of viragos by Aubrey Beardsley are:
"The Cave of Spleen"
http://www-unix.oit.umass.edu/~sconstan/steve7.jpeg
"The Battle of the Beaux and Belles"
http://www-unix.oit.umass.edu/~sconstan/steve8.jpeg
These are included with other similar drawings here:
http://www-unix.oit.umass.edu/~sconstan/pictures.html
on S. Constantine's website on Alexander Pope's The Rape of the Lock
http://www-unix.oit.umass.edu/~sconstan
and here's a caricature by Beardsley, from the Tigertail Virtual Museum:
http://www.tigtail.org/L_View/TVM/X2/d.English/c.other/beardsley/M/NAD/beardsley_my_hostess.jpg
Search Strategy
virago -bike -bikes -biker -bikers -cycle -cycles -motorcycle
-motorcycles -yamaha -motorbike -motorbikes
http://images.google.com/images?q=virago+-bike+-bikes+-biker+-bikers+-cycle+-cycles+-motorcycle+-motorcycles+-yamaha+-motorbike+-motorbikes
I hope that these images provide you with exactly what you were seeking!
Regards,
aceresearcher |
Request for Answer Clarification by
winterte-ga
on
20 May 2004 15:57 PDT
I am hoping for period specific caricatures: that is those that would
have been done from 1780-1800.
|
Clarification of Answer by
aceresearcher-ga
on
20 May 2004 16:58 PDT
winterte,
I am sorry that you did not find your Answer satisfactory.
You did not specify "caricatures done from 1780-1800" in your original
Question or Clarifications, and you also stated "any women from the
french revolution" and "any hand-drawn representation is fine,
although a caricature is preferable". The Answer I provided included
images which met those specifications.
However, I did some further searching and have found for you some
images done during the 1780-1800 time period, regarding a very strong
female figure from that era, Marie Gouze (1748?93), aka Olympe de
Gouges.
http://facweb.furman.edu/~pecoy/projects/gouges/guil.gif
http://mujer.tercera.cl/especiales/2003-dia-mujer/img/olympia.jpg
(enlargement) http://www.darkfriends.net/misc/virago.jpg
http://faculty.fullerton.edu/nfitch/history110b/rep132.jpg
This is part of an excellent 4-page treatise on "Women and the
Revolution", discussing the strong women ("viragos") of that time:
"The boldest statement for women's political rights came from the pen
of Marie Gouze (1748?93), who wrote under the pen name Olympe de
Gouges. An aspiring playwright, Gouges bitterly attacked slavery and
in September 1791 published the Declaration of the Rights of Woman,
modeled on the Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen. Following
the structure and language of the latter declaration, she showed how
women had been excluded from its promises. Although her declaration
did not garner widespread support, it did make her notorious. Like
many of the other leading female activists, she eventually suffered
persecution at the hands of the government; while Etta Palm d'Aelders
and most of the others only had to endure arrest, however, Gouges went
to the guillotine in 1793. Public political activism came at a high
price." (p. 2)
LIBERTY, EQUALITY, FRATERNITY: EXPLORING THE FRENCH REVOLUTION
Lynn Hunt of UCLA and Jack Censer of George Mason University,
principal authors and editors
http://chnm.gmu.edu/revolution/chap5a.html
Regards,
aceresearcher
|
Clarification of Answer by
aceresearcher-ga
on
20 May 2004 22:28 PDT
Ah! And here is a vintage drawing of Madame Defarge knitting in the wine shop:
http://www.bibliomania.com/0/0/19/45/15354/p174.gif
|
Request for Answer Clarification by
winterte-ga
on
21 May 2004 06:20 PDT
thank you, this is much more in line with what I was hoping to find.
I'm pretty sure there is nothing of Wollstonecraft herself out there,
but the bits on de Gourges are of use to me. I'm sorry about the
dates of the images in my first request. It was one of those cases
when it was so clear in my own head, I never imagined someone else not
getting it.
|
Clarification of Answer by
aceresearcher-ga
on
21 May 2004 07:09 PDT
It is my goal to make each Customer happy, so I hope that the
additional images I have posted provided you with what you needed.
Best wishes,
aceresearcher
|
Request for Answer Clarification by
winterte-ga
on
21 May 2004 08:49 PDT
this should, of course, get many more stars; is there a way to change that?
|
Clarification of Answer by
aceresearcher-ga
on
21 May 2004 09:25 PDT
Thank you for offering to do so.
Once a Question has been rated, the Rating typically can not be
changed (although it's my understanding that it has been done on
occasion). However, we get this Question all the time from Customers
who did not realize that a Rating can not be changed, and if you feel
strongly about the issue, you can write the Editors at
answers-editors@google.com .
Once again, I am very glad that I was able to provide you with what you needed.
ace
|