//=time() ?>
'Corn - the source of plenty' — Soviet poster (1960) published during Khrushchev's 'corn crusade'. Design by Alexey Lavrov.
It was published as something of a wry response to the 'The Brown Book of the Reichstag Fire and Hitler Terror', an anti-Nazi book published and widely distributed in 1933.
French postcard published at the end of the Russo-Japanese War (1905) showing a samurai standing atop a mountain of slain Russian soldiers, with the rising sun in the background. Titled: 'Triumph of the yellow'.
Published along with several others in a series celebrating Chinese aid - particularly medical - to Africa. https://t.co/vv8UXenL2p
Greek-American print (1909) depicting a festival celebrating the Greek conquest of Constantinople: 'The Festival of the Expected Pan-Hellenic Rising'.
'In war and peace we serve' — British poster from the Second World War showing trains of the 'Big Four' railway companies speeding along below the Allied flags. Issued by the Ministry of Transport, designed by Reginald Mayes.
Austrian poster (1949) critcising the Allied occupation, showing the country behind the bars of the 1938 Anschluss whose shadow stretches a decade forward to 1948. Published by the Austrian People's Party.
‘See what awaits you if you don’t take up arms’— Polish recruitment poster from the Polish–Soviet War (1920) showing a Red Army soldier carrying a Polish family off into slavery, having just sacked their village. Design by Arthur Szyk.
Nesterov rammed the plane on 25 August 1914. Both planes were downed and all the pilots killed, with Nesterov becoming a hero of Russian propaganda.
'The accuser' — American cartoon criticising the Senate's rejection of the Treaty of Versailles, with Humanity condemning the figure of the U.S. Senate as he stands over the slain Treaty of Peace.
Published in the World Journal Tribune, March 1920. Cartoon by Rollin Kirby.