Picture This : World War I posters and visual culture
Pearl James
U of Nebraska Press (2010)
In Collection
#4904
0*
Art Book
Paperback 9780803226104
Product Details
LoC Classification D522.25 .P53 2009
LoC Control Number 2009021118
Dewey 940.3/1
Nationality Assorted
No. of Pages 416
Height x Width 9.0 x 6.0  inch
First Edition Yes
User Defined
Conflict WW1
Notes
The First World War was waged through the participation not just of soldiers but of men, women, and children on the home front. Mass-produced, full-color, large-format war posters were both a sign and an instrument of this historic shift in warfare. War posters celebrated, in both their form and content, the modernity of the conflict. They also reached an enormous international audience through their prominent display and continual reproduction in pamphlets and magazines in every combatant nation, uniting diverse populations as viewers of the same image and bringing them closer, in an imaginary and powerful way, to the war. Most war posters were aimed particularly at civilian populations. Posters nationalized, mobilized, and modernized those populations, thereby influencing how they viewed themselves and their activities. The home-front life—factory work, agricultural work, domestic work, the consumption and conservation of goods, as well as various forms of leisure—became, through the viewing of posters, emblematic of national identity and of each citizen’s place within the collective effort to win the war.  Essays by Jay Winter, Jeffrey T. Schnapp, Jennifer D. Keene, and others reveal the centrality of visual media, particularly the poster, within the specific national contexts of Britain, France, Germany, Russia, and the United States during World War I. Ultimately, posters were not merely representations of popular understanding of the war, but instruments influencing thereach, meaning, and memory of the war in subtle and pervasive ways.