Journal amusant

Journal amusant was a French weekly satirical magazine published from 1856 until 1933. It was founded by the caricaturist, journalist, and publisher Charles Philipon.

Front page of the first edition, 5 January 1856

The magazine's immediate predecessor was Journal pour rire which Philipon had founded in 1849. In 1856, he replaced it with Journal amusant and simultaneously started Petit Journal pour rire for his friend Nadar to edit, although Nadar was to contribute to both publications.[1] The original format of Journal amusant was 8 pages and consisted primarily of cartoons and caricatures satirizing the social mores of the day. Lighter in tone than Le Charivari (also founded by Philipon), its editorial content was largely focused on the theatre and fashion rather than politics.[2]

Following Charles Philipon's death in 1862, the journal was managed by his son Eugène until his own death in 1874. Pierre Véron then took over as editor-in-chief. In 1899, shortly before Véron's retirement, its format changed to 16 pages with a front page in colour. Publication of the journal ceased during World War I and resumed in May 1919. The last issue of Journal amusant was published in 1933 by which time its title was Le journal amusant et Gai Paris réunis reflecting its takeover of the magazine Gai Paris in 1931.[3]

Contributors

Artists who contributed to Journal amusant include:

gollark: People CAN have differing opinions without being idiots and/or evil.
gollark: You *could* just rebalance things less in favour of Scotland if you were magically in power and this was a problem for you.
gollark: I don't really like any of the major parties. The liberal democrats are vaguely okay but not great and the awful voting system encourages twopartyness.
gollark: My favourite in general is probably 3125 and the antimemetics division tale series based around that.
gollark: There's an entire series of several hundred.

References

  1. Hambourg, Maria Morris et al. (1995). Nadar, pp. 15; 34; 230; 253. Metropolitan Museum of Art
  2. Masson, Antoine and O'Connor, Kevin (eds.) (2007). Representations of Justice, p. 41. Peter Lang
  3. Gianeri, Enrico (ed.) (1995). Periodici illustrati di satira, umorismo, caricatura e varia umanità: 1840-1980, pp. 83; 100. Archivio storico della città di Torino
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