Description
Satire The Weekly Satirical Hubbub French 1883The description of this item has been automatically translated. If you have any questions, please feel free to contact us. The Tintamarre weekly satirical French, year 1883, 48 x 33 cm., half-leather binding, 42nd year, 8 pp. per week, some foxing .The Tintamarre is a weekly satirical French published between 1843 And 1899. After a first issue published on Mars 19, 1843, The Tintamarre is definitely launched on April 2 next by Jules Lovy And Auguste Commerson, respectively editor in chief and director.The title, a colloquial synonym for “noise”, is chosen for its resemblance to that of a previous publication by Commerson, The Tam-Tam. Its subtitle, “criticism of advertising, satire of puffists”, announces the humorous and impertinent ambition of its columns, where cheeky and fanciful texts on the literary, artistic and industrial novelties of the moment rub shoulders with advertising announcements.Most of the articles are signed by pen names, Lovy and Commerson sharing the pseudonym or rather theheteronym by “Joseph Citrouillard”.In 1850, its circulation was 2,300 copies.Co-owner of the newspaper with Commerson since 1868, Léon Bienvenu, known as Touchatout, becomes the owner as well as the director-editor in chief Mars 1872.During the 1890s, the publication of the newspaper became discontinuous and then ceased definitively on December 31, 1899, after fifty-nine years of publication, and 2,672 issues published.Despite the rarity of his humorous drawings, the Tintamarre is considered by the historian Bertrand Joly as “the most direct ancestor of Chained Duck » The title, a colloquial synonym for “noise”, is chosen for its resemblance to that of a previous publication by Commerson, The Tam-Tam. Its subtitle, “criticism of advertising, satire of puffists”, announces the humorous and impertinent ambition of its columns, where cheeky and fanciful texts on the literary, artistic and industrial novelties of the moment rub shoulders with advertising announcements. Co-owner of the newspaper with Commerson since 1868, Léon Bienvenu, known as Touchatout, becomes the owner as well as the director-editor in chief During the 1890s, the publication of the newspaper became discontinuous and then ceased definitively on December 31, 1899, after fifty-nine years of publication, and 2,672 issues published. Despite the rarity of his humorous drawings, the Tintamar