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/cre8/ - Art & Creativity
You Are Not Immune to Propaganda Anonymous Thu 09/01/2025 5:11:08 AM 11 days ago No. 117
Post propoganda, post ones you find cool, or funny, and maybe a little artistic. As a bonus you can even make your own.
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Anonymous Thu 09/01/2025 5:18:42 AM 11 days ago No. 118
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love the ones that show hitler as like a guy you can hang out with but you probably shouldn't
Anonymous Fri 10/01/2025 6:55:53 AM 10 days ago No. 119
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>>118
He just wants to help.
Anonymous Fri 10/01/2025 8:12:54 PM 10 days ago No. 120
wilke.jpg
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>>117
>>118
>>119
Lol I didn't know this was a theme, that's pretty funny. I like OP's pic and pic related where germans depict russians as bringers of death and destruction
Anonymous Fri 10/01/2025 9:09:55 PM 10 days ago No. 121
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This one is from Yugoslav near the end of WWII
>>120
This looks WWI era, so does that mean the smaller rider is supposed to be Tsar Nicholas? Why is he small like a swaddled baby and almost like a captive of the soldier? It's common for propaganda to make an enemy leader small and petulant, but this feels different somehow. The text at the bottom says like "my son, why do you hide your face in fear?" It's an old-timey saying, maybe it's the soldier speaking to the Tsar who is horrified by the actions of his military? That's not how I've learned to see the Russian Empire and it's a strange dynamic for a piece of German or Austrian propaganda to center on
Anonymous Sat 11/01/2025 4:12:16 PM 9 days ago No. 124
>>121
>'Jubilee' — Austrian illustration published in Die Muskete magazine, 13 March 1913, showing Tsar Nicholas II on a horse amid a vast sea of blood and corpses, with a deathly figure sat behind him holding a whip.
>The text at the bottom - 'My son, why do you hide your face in fear?' - is a line from Goethe’s poem 'Erlkönig', which this illustration parodies.
>This issue was published shortly after the jubilee celebrations in Russia, held in February to mark the tercentenary of the Romanov dynasty.
So you got it mostly right. This was a magazine cover, not a proper propaganda poster, so that's why it feels different maybe. Considering the jubilee, I guess the soldier is supposed to represent the Romanov's legacy, and Nicholas is shown as weak or something. In Goethe's poem there is a father and son on horseback, so it could also be just in reference to that.
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