Laughter in the Long Twentieth Century – exhibition and event

The British Cartoon Archive at the University of Kent invites you to join us for our workshop, entitled Laughter in the Long Twentieth Century that explores cartoons through the lens of fascism and queerness.

Date: 1 July 2025
Time: 1pm – 4pm
Location: Available both in person (University of Kent, Templeman Lecture Theatre) and online via MS Teams

This event will feature two guest speakers who will explore the ways in which cartoons have served as tools of resistance and reflection over the course of the long twentieth century.

  • Dr. Harriet Earle, Senior Lecturer at Sheffield Hallam University. Her research  focuses on representations of conflict and trauma in visual culture, especially comics. Her work explores conflict and violence and how this helps to understand PTSD and trauma.
  • David Shenton, cartoonist, specializes in queer comics. Shenton is known for his work “Controlled Hysteria,” Stanley and The Mask of Mystery, and Phobia Phobia. His comic strips have been featured in the collections Strips AidsNo Straight Lines, and AARGH.

For those able to attend in person, there is a tour of the exhibition Laughter in the Twentieth Long Century after the workshop. The exhibition explores cartoons created in the long twentieth century with focus on the interwar period and the decades that followed. The exhibition explores the rise of fascism and the (in)visibility of LGBTQ+ people and communities since the 1960s through the lens of cartoons, highlighting how humour acted both as a powerful tool of social control but also of resistance and defiance in the face of oppression and uncertainty.

Please RSVP at  cartoons@kent.ac.uk 

Thank you to the Beaverbrook Foundation for providing the funds to make this event possible.