Representations of France in English Satirical Prints 1740-1832, therefore, offers a thought-provoking study regarding the multifaceted aspects of not only the function and objective of satirical prints, but also the employment of their polemical agency and reactions of those whom the prints targeted. ... Those interested in material culture, transnational histories, literary culture, and international relations of the long eighteenth century will benefit from Moores's compelling analysis. (Padraig Lawlor, JHistory, H-Net Reviews, networks.h-net.org, November, 2016)
The book offers a useful survey of prints from this period for students and the general reader. Hopefully it will persuade historians to give increased consideration to graphic satire, and encourage scholars to challenge the false dichotomy (that Moores occasionally reifies) at the heart of francophobia. (Amanda Lahikainen, The BARS Review, Issue 47, Spring, 2016)
John Richard Moores completed his PhD at the University of York, UK, and has taught History at the University of York and Durham University. His research interests include collective identities in the long eighteenth century and 'lower' forms of artistic and literary culture, especially comic art.