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Posters for Peace : Visual Rhetoric and Civic Action

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By the spring of 1970, Americans were frustrated by continuing war in Vietnam and turmoil in the inner cities.

Students on American college campuses opposed the war in growing numbers and joined with other citizens in ever-larger public demonstrations against the war.

Some politicians-including Ronald Reagan, Spiro Agnew, and Richard Nixon-exploited the situation to cultivate anger against students.

At the University of California at Berkeley, student leaders devoted themselves, along with many sympathetic faculty, to studying the war and working for peace.

A group of art students designed, produced, and freely distributed thousands of antiwar posters.

Posters for Peace tells the story of those posters, bringing to life their rhetorical iconography and restoring them to their place in the history of poster art and political street art.

The posters are vivid, simple, direct, ironic, and often graphically beautiful.

Thomas Benson shows that the student posters from Berkeley appealed to core patriotic values and to the legitimacy of democratic deliberation in a democracy-even in a time of war.

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£22.36 Save 20.00%
RRP £27.95
Product Details
0271065877 / 9780271065878
Paperback / softback
15/01/2016
United States
224 pages, 66 Halftones, color; 54 Halftones, black and white
178 x 254 mm, 658 grams
Professional & Vocational Learn More