Erin Duncan-O'Neill is Assistant Professor of Art History at the University of Oklahoma.
‘This in-depth study of literary references in the work of Honoré Daumier – Molière, la Fontaine, Cervantes – offers a compelling tale of subversive political satire in the face of censorship.’ Judith Wechsler, author of A Human Comedy: Physiognomy and Caricature in Nineteenth Century Paris ‘Art against censorship offers an important reassessment of Honoré Daumier’s work as caricaturist and painter. Focusing on the many literary allusions and references in the artist’s expansive oeuvre, Duncan-O’Neill affirms both the complexity of graphic satire in nineteenth-century France and the deftness with which Daumier deployed coded cultural references in conveying political messages at times of heightened censorial control. In its interrogation of the interplay between seventeenth-century literature and nineteenth-century visual culture, the book not only enhances our understanding of the work of Daumier but also offers new perspectives on the cultural afterlives of Molière, Cervantes, La Fontaine and Rabelais. Art against censorship makes a powerful case for the continued vitality and importance of culture as a form of dissent, and as a means of speaking truth to power.’ Laura O’Brien, author of The Republican Line: Caricature and French Republican Identity, 1830–52 -- .