Humanities & Social Sciences

Inventing the cave man

From Darwin to the Flintstones

by Andrew Horrall, Jeffrey Richards

Description

Fred Flintstone lived in a sunny Stone Age American suburb, but his ancestors were respectable, middle-class Victorians. They were very amused to think that prehistory was an archaic version of their own world because it suggested that British ideals were eternal. In the 1850s, our prehistoric ancestors were portrayed in satirical cartoons, songs, sketches and plays as ape-like, reflecting the threat posed by evolutionary ideas. By the end of the century, recognisably human cave men inhabited a Stone Age version of late-imperial Britain, sending-up its ideals and institutions. Cave men appeared constantly in parades, civic pageants and costume parties. In the early 1900s American cartoonists and early Hollywood stars like Charlie Chaplin and Buster Keaton adopted and reimagined this very British character, cementing it in global popular culture. Cave men are an appealing way to explore and understand Victorian and Edwardian Britain.

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Reviews

Fred Flintstone lived in a sunny Stone Age American suburb, but his ancestors were respectable, middle-class Victorians. This book traces the cave man character in modern popular culture to its roots in Victorian London. Beginning with reactions to Darwinian ideas, the discovery of gorillas and the remains of ancient hominids in the 1850s, this book shows how elite knowledge was continually reshaped and reimagined for mass audiences in cartoons, songs, sketches, plays and jokes. The first explicitly simian creatures evolved over time to become proto-human missing links, until the 1890s when cave men who inhabited an archaic version of nineteenth-century Britain emerged. This prehistoric world was used to send-up late-Victorian ideals and institutions, while also suggesting that they had existed from the beginning of time. The character spread throughout the empire and across the Atlantic at the turn of the century, where American cartoonists and filmmakers cemented it in global popular culture. Throughout, the history of cave men provides insights into ideas of gender, class, race and religion. This book makes extensive and innovative use of digitised newspapers and magazines from throughout Britain, the empire and the United States. These reveal the long-forgotten popularity of comic prehistory in cartoons, magazines, music halls, songs and popular plays. This book contributes significantly to an understanding of the Victorian turn of mind, by tracing a forgotten aspect of British popular culture that remains visible in the twenty-first century.

Author Biography

Jeffrey Richards is Emeritus Professor of Cultural History at Lancaster University

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Bibliographic Information

  • Publisher Manchester University Press
  • Publication Date May 2017
  • ISBN/Identifier 9781526113870 / 1526113872
  • Publication Country or regionUnited Kingdom
  • Primary Price 29.95 USD
  • ReadershipGeneral/trade
  • Publish StatusPublished
  • SeriesStudies in Popular Culture
  • Reference Code8320

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