rdfs:comment
| - Judy was a British satirical humour magazine of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The full name was Judy; or the London Serio-Comic Journal. The magazine's first issue was cover dated May 1, 1867, and the last issue October 23, 1907. The name "Judy" was in reference to Punch and Judy, and alluded directly to its more established rival, Punch magazine, which had been founded in 1841. (en)
- Judy, or The London Serio-Comic Journal est un magazine hebdomadaire humoristique et satirique britannique fondé en 1867 par M. Bourne et Charles H. Ross avant d'être racheté en 1872 par les frères Dalziel. Il disparaît en 1907. (fr)
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has abstract
| - Judy was a British satirical humour magazine of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The full name was Judy; or the London Serio-Comic Journal. The magazine's first issue was cover dated May 1, 1867, and the last issue October 23, 1907. The name "Judy" was in reference to Punch and Judy, and alluded directly to its more established rival, Punch magazine, which had been founded in 1841. In its August 14, 1867, issue, Judy introduced "Ally Sloper", who was one of the first – possibly the first – comic strip characters (the seminal Yellow Kid, for instance, was not published until almost three decades later, in 1895). Sloper was later the first comic strip character to get his own regular weekly magazine, Ally Sloper's Half Holiday, the first issue having a cover date of May 3, 1884. Sloper was heavily merchandised, and may have been the first comic strip character featured in a popular song ("Ally Sloper's Christmas Holidays", 1886) or adapted to film (1898). (en)
- Judy, or The London Serio-Comic Journal est un magazine hebdomadaire humoristique et satirique britannique fondé en 1867 par M. Bourne et Charles H. Ross avant d'être racheté en 1872 par les frères Dalziel. Il disparaît en 1907. S'inspirant du magazine satirique à succès Punch, tout en étant plus conservateur, beaucoup moins incisif et meilleur marché, Judy proposait textes, caricatures, illustrations et bandes dessinées destinés aux classes moyennes. Ce fut selon David Kunzle « l'un des plus populaires des magazines humoristiques familiaux de l'Angleterre de la fin du XIXe siècle ». C'est dans ses pages qu'est né Ally Sloper, qualifié par Roger Sabin de « première superstar de la bande dessinée ». (fr)
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