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  1. " We Can Do It! " is an American World War II wartime poster produced by J. Howard Miller in 1943 for Westinghouse Electric as an inspirational image to boost female worker morale. The poster was little seen during World War II.

  2. This collection contains 69 World War II political posters from the United States. The posters are considered to be propaganda, with messages encouraging participation in the war effort. The poster's intended audiences range from young men, expected to enlist in the war effort, to women and children, expected to assist the war from the homefront.

  3. This paper deals with the general tendencies and characteristics of the image of a woman on political-agitation and methodological-instructional posters published in Soviet Georgia during the Second World War. The aim of the research is to analyze the images of women on the propaganda posters during the war period from a gender perspective.

  4. In the first five years of the communist regime, the image of women peasants in propaganda posters had been firmly cemented as catalysts for political and social change. As a majority population, the rural people of Russia inhabited a dichotomy in which they were simultaneously the most important demographic in Russia and the demographic that ...

  5. 16 mar 2022 · The woman in the poster wears a Westinghouse button on her lapel, and the red, white, and blue clothing is a subtle nod to patriotism. While frequently called “Rosie,” the woman in the “We Can Do It” poster was not “Rosie.” ( 1985.0851.05 )

  6. The Posters To Recruit Women. Encouraging women to join the reserves and fight for the country. Explore the poster collections by color. Pick a color. Joining the fight. Propaganda posters...

  7. Second World War propaganda posters. During the Second World War, the Ministry of Information produced propaganda posters to influence the British public on the home front. These...

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