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Street and Smith's New York Weekly
Public domain · digitally restored by comicbooks.com
Penny Dreadfuls

Street and Smith's New York Weekly

· August 19, 1878

This front page features a dramatic engraving of a figure crouched in a moonlit forest, surrounded by gnarled trees—a scene of gothic horror typical of penny dreadfuls. Street and Smith's New York Weekly exemplified the cheap serialized fiction that saturated working-class Victorian reading. Priced affordably, these publications delivered weekly installments of melodramatic tales featuring crime, supernatural horror, and social scandal. The sensational woodcut imagery and lurid narratives exploited contemporary anxieties about urban danger and moral decay. Such periodicals, dismissed by middle-class reformers as corrupting influences, became the direct precursor to twentieth-century comic books, establishing conventions of serialized visual storytelling and the marriage of dramatic image to serialized narrative that would define the medium.

About this artifact

Date
August 19, 1878
Rights
Public domain — free to view, share, and reuse.
Restoration
Digitally restored and hosted by comicbooks.com.

Part of our mission to preserve and restore the public-domain heritage of the medium.