Daily Mail website has an article about some WW1 German drawings that are being put up for auction. They seem to think the drawings are all meant to be funny, but fail to the get the joke if so.
Search term: humorous german cartoons
BTW - anyone noticed the tumbleweed blowing through the forum this weekend?
It appears a sub-editor at the Daily Mail shares your concerns TCT:'Humorous' German cartoons of life on the frontline in World War I are unearthed (and no, they're not funny)
They seem to focus on the incongruity of maintaining the trappings of civilisation/normalcy in a time of total war. I'm sure this falls within the taxonomy of "humour" according to the exhaustive (mostly Teutonic) analyses of the topic. Anyway, it seems the German general officer who commissioned them could at least, laugh at himself. And it is nice to see that the lack of dunny paper afflicted the Central Powers just as it did the Allies. Hence the importance to both sides of Routine Orders and it also explains both why the were eagerly anticipated by the troops and why the authorities stopped using white arsenic as a sizing agent in their paper supplies. Okay, I just made up the last one.
"Sometimes things that are not true are included in Wikipedia. While at first glance that may appear like a very great problem for Wikipedia, in reality is it not. In fact, it's a good thing." - Wikipedia.
Beg pardon, Stephen. I forgot. I first came across it in a book called The Price of Pity, which was written by my old headmaster, doncher know.
Plug? Is that another Rectalgia joke?
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"Sometimes things that are not true are included in Wikipedia. While at first glance that may appear like a very great problem for Wikipedia, in reality is it not. In fact, it's a good thing." - Wikipedia.
No, no, straight up, - I have an abiding admiration for officers like Herbert who got up the noses of their "superiors". Helped keep the lower orders sane, I'm sure. Bruce Bairnsfather was another. They should be cherished more. These men had an unwavering moral compass, easy to appreciate in quiet retrospection but devilish hard, surely, to maintain at the time, let alone to flaunt it from a vantage of modest authority.
And, dare one think, this German cartoonist was another? In a sense he was more successful since he had high patronage for his lampooning, less successful since he was kept close (what a clever, subtle old General that was to so subvert him).
It appears a sub-editor at the Daily Mail shares your concerns TCT:
Actually I was just trying to say what their view is, I didn't have much of an opinion myself - although I can only see a hint of humour in the toilet paper sketch, the others just look like representations to me.