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  1. 11 lip 2012 · Given the apparent importance of woman and her image in Nazi propaganda, the virtual absence of women in German World War II poster art -- arguably the most propag andistic of media -- is...

  2. 11 lip 2012 · "Marking Time" considers the relative scarcity of woman's image in Nazi propaganda posters during World War II. This scarcity departs from the ubiquity of women in paintings and sculptures of the same period.

  3. 30 lis 2020 · The Nazis made extensive use of propaganda to cement their reign of terror. An illustrated book looks at the psychological manipulation behind Nazi poster art.

  4. Nazi propaganda photo depicts friendship between an "Aryan" and a black woman. The caption states: "The result! A loss of racial pride." Germany, prewar.

  5. The posters examine how the Nazis used propaganda to win broad voter support in Germany’s young democracy after World War I, implement radical programs under the party’s dictatorship in the 1930s, and justify war and mass murder.

  6. Nazi cause in the context of the Second World War. An analysis of Nazi propaganda posters, cover art for women’s and girl’s magazines as well as speeches by Nazi leaders on the duties of women reveals that the demand for workers after 1939 led the Nazi Party to alter women’s roles

  7. After an institutional shake up, new executives had been hired, mostly from advertising agencies. While the old guard, to which Shahn belonged, had believed in telling the truth about the war, the new guard, so it seemed, was trying to promote it like a product. Shahn’s poster protested this shift.