World War I: Poster Art Brian Conley Suffolk University
WWI: War Art
[New York] Leslie-Judge Co., ©1917
WWI: War Art [n.p., 1919?]
WWI: War Art National Association of Manufacturers
WWI: War Art National Association of Manufacturers
WWI: War Art Cesare, The New York Evening Post
WWI: War Art Produced by the Committee on Public Information, Division of Pictorial Publicity.
WWI: War Art Brooklyn: Robert Gair Company, 1918.
WWI: War Art [New York? 1918?]
WWI: War Art New York: O'Connor-Fyffe Adv. [1918?]
WWI: War Art United States Food Administration
WWI: War Art Published by the Parliamentary Recruiting Committee, London
WWI: War Art New York: U. S. Navy Publishing Bureau [1917] Reproduction of a cartoon from The New York Herald.
WWI: War Art Chicago: Manz Engraving Co. [1917]
WWI: War Art Chicago: Edwards & Deutsch [1918]
WWI: War Art
Propaganda Fuses Social Classes "Propaganda bridges the interval between the intellectual and practical classes" (p. 113) Rhetoric of Popular Control Necessitates Propaganda "Only through the wise use of propaganda will our government...be able to maintain that intimate relationship with the public which is necessary in a democracy." (113) "Ours must be a leadership democracy administered by the intelligent minority who know how to regiment and guide the masses." (114)