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According to Orwell, all of the
English papers published at the time were stuck in the 1910s and had an underlying conservative slant, which taught children to be deferential to the upper-class. He suggested socialist values could be just as exciting if they followed the story paper format.
189:". Story papers in this style minimized the expense of writing in order to produce an extremely cheap product. Strictly speaking, the "penny dreadful" died off by the turn of the century, but this term was still used to refer to story papers throughout their history. The
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as the "Golden Age" of story papers. Sales of the story papers were at their highest during these years, as were the fecundity of the authors, the range in genre of magazines, and the colourful variety of the heroes. The most famous story paper hero,
195:, first published in 1893, was "founded to counteract the pernicious influences of the Penny Dreadfuls", according to its title page. A book about these weeklies (also called "bloods" because of their savage contents) was created in 1948 by
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briefly flourished, but television had a growing influence on the attentions of
British children. Mergers between publishing houses finished off the remaining story papers, or modified them to become comic books, in the 1970s.
279:, the oldest of their kind, featured school serials always centred on a group of characters any reader could identify with. More recent story papers focused on adventure and intrigue, and had a large teenage readership.
149:, but featuring illustrations and text stories, and aimed towards children and teenagers. Also known in Britain as "boys' weeklies", story papers were phenomenally popular before the outbreak of the
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267:, outlines the general themes of the story paper in the "Golden Age". As far as Orwell could tell, Britain was the only country in Europe in which story papers were produced.
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World War II caused chaos in
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There were story papers for children of both sexes, although there was a broad overlap in the actual readership of the two.
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and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by
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for story papers, and nearly all of the papers ceased printing in 1939 or 1940.
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The first known edition of what would later become known as a "story paper" was
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The
Ultimate Book of British Comics 70 years of mischief, mayhem and cow pies
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This article is about
British magazines. For the US version, see
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University of
Minnesota Hess Collection: Story Papers 1850-1910
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British
Juvenile Story Papers and Pocket Libraries Index
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was the last survivor and ceased publishing in 1973.
156:Among the most well-known British story papers was
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913:Story Papers from 110 years of AP / Fleetway / IPC
239:In the 1950s and 1960s, some story papers such as
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185:on the English streets for a penny—the first "
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898:Collecting Books and Magazines: Story Papers
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211:Denis Gifford designated the period between
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145:is a periodical publication similar to a
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181:In 1866, Charles Stephens began selling
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16:Type of magazine for young people (UK)
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176:The Boys' and Girls' Penny Magazine
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903:British Story Papers Flickr Group
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938:Culture of the United Kingdom
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864:Kibble-White, Graham (2005).
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235:Silver Age and modern comics
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717:The Sexton Blake Library
780:Young England magazine
640:Public School Magazine
339:Boy's Best Story Paper
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563:Lion (boys' magazine)
521:The Greyfriars Herald
430:The Children's Friend
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493:The Girl's Own Paper
325:Aunt Judy's Magazine
305:adding missing items
290:List of story papers
52:improve this article
703:Schoolgirls' Weekly
444:Dixon Hawke Library
381:The Boy's Own Paper
254:Format and politics
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591:Nelson Lee Library
472:Girl's Best Friend
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817:The Silver Jacket
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201:Boys Will be Boys
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360:The Boys' Friend
309:reliable sources
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69: –
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67:"Story paper"
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63:Find sources:
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41:This article
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301:dynamic list
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217:World War II
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50:Please help
45:verification
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928:Periodicals
787:Young Folks
752:The Triumph
724:The Skipper
612:Peg's Paper
577:`The Marvel
528:The Hotspur
416:The Captain
213:World War I
143:story paper
922:Categories
875:0749082119
851:References
840:Dime novel
773:The Wizard
759:Union Jack
689:Schooldays
647:The Ranger
570:The Magnet
549:The Jester
542:Jabberwock
458:The Empire
332:Big Budget
299:This is a
276:The Magnet
261:'s essay,
207:Golden Age
166:Beginnings
108:March 2014
78:newspapers
21:Dime novel
810:Australia
805:(Ireland)
661:The Rover
654:Red Arrow
626:The Pilot
598:Our Girls
318:Adventure
248:The Rover
242:The Rover
229:Dark Ages
199:, called
824:See also
802:Our Boys
731:Startler
409:Bullseye
795:Ireland
745:Tip Top
465:The Gem
270:The Gem
92:scholar
872:
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710:Scout
633:Pluck
556:Joker
437:Chums
307:with
99:JSTOR
85:books
870:ISBN
605:Pals
273:and
215:and
71:news
54:by
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295:UK
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141:A
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