Abstract

Pictorial journalism in the latter nineteenth century faced a temporal conundrum: whereas words could travel by telegraph and hence at the speed of electricity, the accompanying illustrations had to travel as material objects and were chronically belated. This article analyzes the strategies with which two prominent Victorian weekly papers—Illustrated London News and Punch—sought to deal with the slowness of illustration and reconcile the speed differentials between textual and visual news with their printing deadlines and production cycles. The most striking of these strategies was to deploy an ‘oracular pencil’ to work up an illustration before an event had taken place. These pre-produced illustrations relied on specific visual codes that shaped the illustrations’ ‘truth.’ The article shows that, contrary to the self-positioning of pictorial journalists as reporting truthfully and speedily on the world ‘out there,’ the pictorial press had its own temporal and epistemological laws.

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