Propaganda was heavily used by the parties involved in WWII. The United States depended on propaganda to get Americans to participate in the war effort. For instance, to encourage Americans to cultivate victory gardens, the federal government published posters depicting an All-American family ...
This famous phrase has roots with the ancient Greeks, but it appeared on this U.S. WWII propaganda poster in 1942. Fundamentally, the phrase denotes the idea that if members of a group with cohesive beliefs work individually instead of as a team, they are destined for failure. This concept...
This propaganda is similar to the WWII Japanese campaign when they attacked the European colonies and used to theme "Asia for the Asians." The back of the leaflet depicted bodies in a mass open grave and reminded the soldier, " Don’t finish like this! It’s not your war…" How the C...
Unfortunately, the Hagiwara family’s 50 years of dedicated work in the garden ended abruptly when they were forcibly relocated to internment camps during WWII (Dubrow 2017). Figure 3. Japanese Tea Garden. Located at 75 Hagiwara Tea Garden Drive (Golden Gate Park). Photograph by Rodríguez-...