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L'Assiette au Beurre

L'Assiette au Beurre
Magazine cover showing a group of people crowded together in a room all wearing winter clothing and appearing to be miserably cold all watching a man behind a drafting table closely studying a newspaper
L'Assiette au Beurre issue 1; cover designed by Théophile Steinlen.
Format 25 cm × 32 cm (9.8 in × 12.6 in)
Founder Samuel-Sigismond Schwarz; subsequent directors: André de Joncières & Georges Anquetil
Year founded 4 April 1901
Final issue 1936
Country France
Language French
ISSN 2021-0558
OCLC number 1514496

L'Assiette au Beurre (literally The Butter Plate, and roughly translating to the English expression pork barrel) was an illustrated French weekly satirical magazine with anarchist political leanings that was chiefly produced between 1901 and 1912. It was revived as a monthly for a time and ceased production in 1936.

The magazine's caricature and editorial cartoon content was drawn from a varied cadre of illustrator-contributors of many backgrounds and disparite artistic styles. The content often focused on socialist and anarchist ideas. The first series expired on 15 October 1912. A second series was published between 1921 and 1925 on a monthly basis, eventually becoming a single supplement.

At the time of its founding near the start of the twentieth century, France was divided on crucial issues such as the extension of military service, revanchism (the call of French nationalists to avenge and reclaim from Germany the annexed territories of Alsace-Lorraine), right of association, separation of church and state, freedom of speech, and the emergence of new and radical political and social ideas in France such as revolutionary syndicalism, antimilitarism, anti-clericalism, Proletarian internationalism, feminism and the rise of labour law, which were all subjects of feature in the magazine.


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