The Brandeis University World War I and World War II Propaganda Posters collection includes nearly 100 different images (a majority from the WWI era) addressing a variety of American war aims. The ...
Inside were nine enormous posters, weathered and folded into sixteenths. Though the text was Cyrillic, the imagery was clear: These were World War II propaganda posters promoting the Soviet-U.S ...
The poster was produced internally for Westinghouse ... became "a worldwide symbol of women in the defense industry in World War II." Except that it was not. Westinghouse Electric paid for ...
Patriotic posters appealing to American women for assistance during World War II led to thousands volunteering for the military or opting to work in positions traditionally held by men.
You've likely seen the iconic image before - a woman in a red polka-dot bandana, rolling up her sleeve and flexing her muscle ...
Posters were re-used, redistributed, stolen, and trashed. During World War II, massive scrap paper drives claimed treasures from the silent era. Ambitious fire marshals demanded that theaters ...
In a series of 60 posters, the exhibit digs into how scientists around the world developed the nuclear bomb and nuclear power stations following World War II. It also looks at how the development ...
During World War II German propaganda emphasized the prowess ... Other propaganda came in the form of posters, movies, and even cartoons. Inexpensive, accessible, and ever-present in schools ...