“This is a White Man’s Government” Thomas Nest poster calling out the 1868 Democratic Party platform and their rhetoric of turning the poor whites against freedmen
Soviet illustration (1948) showing Churchill handing the Sword of Stalingrad to Stalin at the Tehran Conference. Artist: Konstantin Finogenov.
DPRK poster about the Chollima Movement “Did you ride the Mallima steed? Give full rein to the principle of giving priority to self-development!” Year unknown
”THE SCARLET WOMAN – TO WHOM SHALL SHE PAY?” – American cartoon (”Puck” magazine, artist: Gordon Grant) commenting on the need for the regulation of prostitution, circa December 1912
“Don’t vote for the Christian Democratic Party, you regretted it at least three times. Vote communist” — Italian Communist Party propaganda poster (ca. 1960)
”THE AMERICAN POLICY – Bringing the truant boy to the little Red, White and Blue Schoolhouse” – American cartoon from ”Judge” magazine (artist: Grant E. Hamilton), April 1901
”THE AMERICAN POLICY – Bringing the truant boy to the little Red, White and Blue Schoolhouse” – American cartoon from ”Judge” magazine (artist: Grant E. Hamilton), April 1901
❝… decidedly comic, yet at times virulent anti-capitalist theme. Amongst the themes that are recognizable are pro-labor, anti-capitalist, pro-worker and over all socialist imagery. However the irony, sarcasm, and in some cases, the patently absurd messages become confusing.❞ Year Unknown
”Problem Child” – Canadian cartoon (”The Gazette”, artist: John Collins) commenting on Georgy Malenkov’s announcement of the creation of the Soviet hydrogen bomb, circa August 1953
”Problem Child” – Canadian cartoon (”The Gazette”, artist: John Collins) commenting on Georgy Malenkov’s announcement of the creation of the Soviet hydrogen bomb, circa August 1953
“Workers! this is your future if fascism triumphs” popaganda from the syndicalist party of Spain during the civil war (1936-1939)
”THE AGE OF INVENTION – FUTURE BUSINESS MAN (to Miss Nature): I have no more use for you; modern inventions have taken your place. »I press the button, they do the rest«” – American cartoon from ”Judge” magazine (artist: Grant E. Hamilton), October 1891
”THE AGE OF INVENTION – FUTURE BUSINESS MAN (to Miss Nature): I have no more use for you; modern inventions have taken your place. »I press the button, they do the rest«” – American cartoon from ”Judge” magazine (artist: Grant E. Hamilton), October 1891
”UNCLE SAM’S SANITARY BARBER-SHOP. NEXT!” – American cartoon from ”Judge” magazine (artist: Eugene Zimmerman), May 1905
”THE AGE OF INVENTION – FUTURE BUSINESS MAN (to Miss Nature): I have no more use for you; modern inventions have taken your place. »I press the button, they do the rest«” – American cartoon from ”Judge” magazine (artist: Grant E. Hamilton), October 1891
”UNCLE SAM’S SANITARY BARBER-SHOP. NEXT!” – American cartoon from ”Judge” magazine (artist: Eugene Zimmerman), May 1905
”UNCLE SAM’S SANITARY BARBER-SHOP. NEXT!” – American cartoon from ”Judge” magazine (artist: Eugene Zimmerman), May 1905
‘Eat less and let us be thankful that we have enough to share with those who fight for freedom’ (American poster by Alice Hendee/ U.S. Food Administration/ Edwards & Deutsch Litho. Co. United States of America, 1918).
‘Death to the German invaders! – To victory!’ (Russian poster by M. Schuwajew. Soviet Union, ca. 1940).
“God bless you massa! you cloth and feed us. When we are sick you nurse us, and when too old to work, you provide for us.” Pro-Slavery card, 1841.
‘Kyiv – The greatest victory over the arch-enemy of Europe!’ (Dutch Nazi pamphlet celebrating the defeat of Soviet troops near Kyiv, September 1941. Nazi occupied Netherlands, October 1941).
‘Youth in crisis’ (American magazine ad promoting the short documentary film by Louis de Rochemont as part of ‘The March of Time’ series. United States of America, December 1943).
❝ Orlando Ferguson’s Flat Earth Map of 1893 mocked ’round earth believers’ as seen in this detail from the map’s margins. ❞
Japanese postcard from the Second World War (ca. 1942-3) showing the mythological Hōō bird standing on the heads of Winston Churchill and Franklin Roosevelt, both rolled up in their flags.
”The trouble is that if you grant human rights to political prisoners, the first thing you know, common delinquents will expect human rights, too” – American cartoon (”Fort Worth Star-Telegram”, artist: Etta Hulme) mocking Augusto Pinochet’s dictatorship, June 1976
“Vote for Woman Suffrage, November 6th”. “We give our men, our time, our lives, if need be-Will you give us the vote?” Date: 1917
Communist propaganda poster claiming that the US treats France like a conquered country to use in their war with the USSR, 1961
‘Don’t let it happen here! – Your production must prevent it!’ (American poster by the Bureau of Ordnance, Navy Department/ U.S. Government Printing Office. United States of America, 1941).
‘Antifascistische Aktion – Come to us’ (German poster with the famous antifa logo by Max Gebhard/ Max Keilson. With two flags representing KPD and SPD(?). Nazi Germany, 1932).
“(God) hath made of one blood all nations of men for to dwell on all the face of the earth, and hath determined the times before appointed, and the BOUNDS OF THEIR HABITATION.” — North Carolina, 1966
[author and date unknown] Can anyone provide information about the author as well as the date / place of origin of this cartoon, please?
“Our labor victories are all better, more joyous, bigger. Soviet Russia rented equipment of the past to the museum!” by Viktor Ivanovič Govorkov, 1966.
”THE NATIONAL BIRD OF PREY” – American cartoon (”Puck” magazine, artist: John Samuel Pughe) depicting John D. Rockefeller as a vulture, September 1905
”A Short History of Peace Petitions” – political cartoon made by Canadian cartoonist John Collins (”The Gazette”), circa 1950
‘How did you help Donbass?’ (Soviet poster written in Ukrainian. Printed in Kyiv, signed ‘Sjuli’/ ‘Ziuli’/ ‘Z. Yu. Sch.'(?). Ukrainian Soviet Socialistic Republic, 1921).
‘A message about food from the President of the United States’ (American poster by U.S. Department of Agriculture/ Government Printing Office. United States of America, 1946).
Two paintings by American artist George Rodrigue, exhibited at the Moscow World Trade Center during the Moscow Summit, 29 May – 3 June, 1988 (United States of America, 1988).
“An ass remains an ass.” Nazi Germany, 1944. The Democratic Party was supporting FDR for a fourth term. The Democratic donkey is saying: “Please tread on me for four more years, dictator!”
‘How did you help Donbass?’ (Russian poster signed ‘Sjuli’, printed Kiev. Russian Soviet Republic, 1921).
‘… and God bless daddy and all the American workers who are doing so much to protect freedom and make this a better world for us to live in’ (American work incentive poster by The Sheldon-Claire Co. Chicago. United States of America, 1942).
“Long live the great Soviet friendship!” / Poster dedicated to the 300th Anniversary of the Reunification of the Ukraine and Russia / USSR, 1954
“He alone of two billion people on earth may not speak in Germany.” Weimar Republic, 1925. For a period in the 1920’s, Hitler was forbidden to address public meetings in much of Germany, which was a major blow to the Nazi propaganda apparatus.
‘Wake up Americans! Do you want this?’ (American sticker that was put on Jewish-owned stores in Portland/ Oregon, June 1938. As reported in Life magazine, 11 July 1938. Reprinted in Dutch collaborative pamphlet ‘Geef mij maar Amerika!’, ca. 1943. United States of America, 1938).
Macedonian nationalist map produced and circulated in Melbourne (ca. 1991-2) showing a Greater Macedonia partitioned in three.
‘… and God bless daddy and all the American workers who are doing so much to protect freedom and make this a better world for us to live in’ (American work incentive poster by The Sheldon-Claire Co. Chicago. United States of America, 1942).
Now why did I not think of simply putting in the search-term ❝Kill that Eagle !❞ !?Poster done by °John Henry Amshewitz° (1882–1942) in 1914, satirically depicting the menace posed by the military ambitions @ the time of the German State.
“Pastor Jim Jones in a great prophetic revelations and healing service – COME SEE HEAR AT PEOPLE’S TEMPLE” United States, 1971
From an 1860 edition of °Punch° magazine: propaganda intended to put the wind up folk wearing clothes dyed with arsenic-based dyes, seeking to instill all-over the place their doctrine as to caution at the use in garment manufacture of fabrics dyed in that way.