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This template is to help users write non-free use rationales for various kinds of posters as required by Non-free content and Non-free use rationale guideline. Include this in the file page, once for each time you insert an image of the poster art into an article. Please use copyrighted content responsibly and in accordance with Wikipedia policy.
A WWI Recruitment poster, using a New York Herald cartoon by W.A. Rogers. Shows an anthropomorphised Germany wading through a sea of dead bodies, with the slogan "Only the Navy can Stop This". Shows an anthropomorphised Germany wading through a sea of dead bodies, with the slogan "Only the Navy can Stop This".
Print/export Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ... Pages in category "Soviet propaganda posters" The following 4 pages are in this category, out ...
Doing so will alternatively put the image into Non-free posters category. However, you have the option of putting the image into one of the appropriate sub-categories such as Non-free images of event posters, Non-free images of film posters, Animated film posters, Non-free images of television program posters, Non-free images of theatre posters, etc.
Media in category "Propaganda posters" The following 2 files are in this category, out of 2 total. Lithuanian poster urging not to forget Vilnius.jpg 249 × 400; 22 KB
The famous propaganda poster warned Swedes to be wary of speaking. En svensk tiger (Swedish: [ɛn ˈsvɛnːsk ˈtǐːɡɛr]) was a slogan and an image that became part of a propaganda campaign in Sweden during World War II. Its goal was to prevent espionage by encouraging secrecy.
The Palestine Poster Project Archives (PPPA) was founded as a means of collecting and digitally displaying a wide variety of works in the Palestine poster genre. The Palestine poster genre is more than a century old and growing. The Palestine Poster Project Archives continues to expand as the largest online collection of such posters. [1]
The journal Social Theory and Practice uses this instance to exemplify how growing public frustration with complex federal environmental regulations leads to rapidly polarizing opinions on environmental regulations in the United States: one is either a citizen who supports people, private property, and the U.S. Constitution, or a radical ...