Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- List of Illustrations
- List of Abbreviations
- 1 Introduction
- Part I Suffering, Reconciliation and Values in the Seventeenth Century
- Part II The State, Soldiers and Civilians
- Part III Who is a Civilian? Who is a Soldier?
- 10 Conflicted Identities: Soldiers, Civilians and the Representation of War
- 11 ‘Turning Out for Twenty-Days Amusement’: The Militia in Georgian Satirical Prints
- 12 Insurgents and Counter-Insurgents between Military and Civil Society from the 1790s to 1815
- Part IV Contradictions of the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars
- Bibliography
- Index
11 - ‘Turning Out for Twenty-Days Amusement’: The Militia in Georgian Satirical Prints
from Part III - Who is a Civilian? Who is a Soldier?
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- List of Illustrations
- List of Abbreviations
- 1 Introduction
- Part I Suffering, Reconciliation and Values in the Seventeenth Century
- Part II The State, Soldiers and Civilians
- Part III Who is a Civilian? Who is a Soldier?
- 10 Conflicted Identities: Soldiers, Civilians and the Representation of War
- 11 ‘Turning Out for Twenty-Days Amusement’: The Militia in Georgian Satirical Prints
- 12 Insurgents and Counter-Insurgents between Military and Civil Society from the 1790s to 1815
- Part IV Contradictions of the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
James Gillray's ‘Supplementary Militia, turning out for Twenty-Days Amusement’ of 1796 (fig. 1) is the quintessential image of part-time soldiering. On the face of it, Gillray pokes fun in predictable ways, using several visual techniques to suggest that the militiamen are hapless amateurs rather than professionals. First, each man bears the tools of his civilian trade: from left to right we have a cobbler, a plasterer, a painter, a tailor, a hairdresser and a suitably rotund butcher. Secondly, the print underlines their lack of uniformity and discipline by sharply characterising them as individuals: the men are of various heights and builds, with ill-matching and dilapidated uniforms. Their bodies are either extremely thin or fat, with short legs and narrow shoulders – in pointed contrast to the ideal military body of the age. With such a rag-tag assortment, their effort to march in step is in vain. Gillray literally has a field day with the comic possibilities of the civilian soldier, a liminal figure whose uncertain position between the military and civilian worlds is ripe for visual mockery. This was as true of the militia in the eighteenth century as it was to be of the Yeomanry in the nineteenth and the Home Guard in the twentieth: Gillray's print has pride of place in a long tradition within British graphic satire.
This chapter, however, will argue that there is a lot more going on in the print than cheap jokes about the militia's ineptitude or failure to be true soldiers. Historians recognise that the militia was a key political issue in eighteenth-century Britain, since it went to the heart of constitutional debates about executive power, national strength and the rights and responsibilities of the ordinary citizen. In contrast with continental Europe, in the Anglo-American tradition the ‘citizen soldier’ was a citizen first and a soldier second: its ‘amateur military tradition’ celebrated the power of the individual rather than that of the state.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Civilians and War in Europe 1618–1815 , pp. 157 - 181Publisher: Liverpool University PressPrint publication year: 2012
- 1
- Cited by