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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1901/374

Title: The Art of War; Visual Propaganda and American Military Recruiting. An Annotated Bibliography
Authors: Michelle A. Rubino
Keyword: World War, 1939-1945
Keyword: Posters/History
Keyword: United States/National Archives and Records Administration/Art Collections
Keyword: Military literature/Bibliography
Keyword: United States – Armed Forces – Recruiting
Issue Date: 9-Apr-2007
Publisher: School of Information and Library Science
Abstract: This annotated bibliography explores propaganda themes, phrases, and images in recruiting pamphlets and posters. The pamphlets are from 1918 – 1977 and explore a wide range of themes and the evolution of propaganda angles. All of the posters, with the exception of two, are from WWII and show similarities and differences in the recruiting methods of the branches of military service. Stereotypes are described as are portrayals of different branches which still apply today. The recruitment of women is explored, from the no-nonsense angle of WWII to the career-minded, civil-rights aware woman of the 1970’s. The establishment of the Office of War Information is discussed, as are its poster production and distribution campaigns. Addresses the poster as the ideal medium in a pre-television age and pamphlets as another, supplemental, means of advertising.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/1901/374
Appears in Collections:SILS Master's Papers

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