Strube's cartoons for the
Express included his character the Little Man, the personification of the "man in the street", which appeared every day on the editorial page. The "Little Man" wore a bowler hat, carried an umbrella, and represented the hard-pressed taxpayer suffering under politicians and vested interests. The
interwar years witnessed growth of the
middle class and of the suburbs, along with the domestification of
popular culture. According to
Alison Light, the nation abandoned "formerly heroic...public rhetorics of national destiny" in favour of "an Englishness at once less imperial and more inward-looking, more domestic and more private". Consequently, traditional state displays of patriotism (such as the Silver Jubilee of
George V) became less significant; in this context the Little Man replaced John Bull as the personification of the nation. According to
Rod Brookes, Strube's cartoons represented a "modern, privatised version of British national identity defined against the archaic, aggressive, jingoistic Nationalism of European countries". Some saw the Little Man as symbolic of Britain's post-
First World War decline.
George Orwell's protagonist in his 1936 novel
Keep the Aspidistra Flying denounces the Little Man as a symbol of suburban mediocrity and conformity: "the typical bowler-hatted sneak—Strube's 'little man'".
W. H. Auden's 1937 poem "Letter to Lord Byron" favourably contrasted John Bull to the Little Man. Auden wrote: : Ask the cartoonist first, for he knows best. : Where is the John Bull of the good old days, : The swaggering bully with the clumsy jest? : His meaty neck has long been laid to rest, : His acres of self-confidence for sale; : He passed away at
Ypres and
Passchendaele. : Turn to the work of
Disney or of Strube; : There stands our hero in his threadbare seams; : The bowler hat who strap-hangs in the tube, : And kicks the tyrant only in his dreams, : Trading on pathos, dreading all extremes; : The little
Mickey with the hidden grudge; : Which is the better, I leave you to judge. == Notes ==