-aka "engeys"
Rodolphe Töpffer
-French writer whose engraved literature becomes wildly popular
-Railways allow for the transmission of his literature across French Republic
-because this is a country where the population only semi-knows French or knows dialects which are in the process of being derogated
-allows for France to get a substantial portion of this genre
Looking Glass
-kicks off properly after British Wars > Popular Revolution (1827-9) as something with a national range and published in Lodon
-and in aftermath of Töpffer's work
-in chaotic Headless State era it leads to it being extremely influential but scandalous publication
-with its parodies making it something on sort of par with Gillray
-and free speech means it has free range to publish so long as mobs don't attack it
-which isn't a 100% given in this chaotic era
-particularly important in Anglo world in 1830s-60s
-and inspires copycats across British Empire and also the US
Monkey King
-Rodrigo Jangue is son of Chinese father and Filipino mother (a common pairing) in San Francisco in United Provinces of Buenaventura
-within SF's oldest and original Chinatown
-writes an influential engraved novel as an adaptation of Journey to the West in 1892
-with a special focus on Sun Wukong after whom it's named
-released serially
-intentionally written to avoid accusations of paganism but gets them anyways
-Jangue fiercely disagrees and writes an open letter in the newspaper declaring himself a good Independent Catholic and firmly not a pagan
-and compares his use of Sun Wukong to the use of Greek gods in western culture
-beyond this doesn't respond, he accepts that in the Buenaventura of his time he'll get a certain level of racial hate anyways
-massive success published in both English and Spanish
-editions spread across North America and even beyond
-with some editions even crossing back into Asia through networks and notably in India where Sun Wukong is viewed as the Chinese form of Hanuman
-it is this above all which puts engraved novels on the map
Santiago the Swordsman
-a direct reaction to the Monkey King's "paganism"
-a bunch of Christians (of many denominations) seek to write counter-engraves to combat it
-published in 1895
-features Santiago, a good Christian (of malleable denomination) who fights against the forces of Satan with weapons blessed by God
-enemies going the gamut between full-blown bigoted and normal baddie such as
-a bloodthirsty monkey named Sun Wukong who leads an army of bloodthirsty monkeys to wreck cities
-Juggernaut, a paraplegic (but levitating) "Hindoo" with a rictus smile who commandeers a huge wheeled contraption (based on Jagganath at Puri) powered by black magic fuelled by human sacrifice before its deadly spiked wheels
-Dr. Jacques Bloumenstein, a French mad scientist clearly coded as Jewish (but writing is unwilling to go all the way b/c might be too far for some audiences) who engages in extreme schemes with mad inventions to defraud and control people to attain wealth and power
-despite extreme bigotry, and the anti-Judaism considered extreme in the environment of San Francisco, it's written quite well
-and successfully achieves widespread publication and informal serials
-eventually adapted over and over again
-and though adaptations try to downplay the bigotry, it's still there