Photo, Print, Drawing We Can Do It! Rosie the Riveter. This poster, produced by Westinghouse during World War II for the War Production Co-Ordinating Committee, was part of the national campaign in the United States to enlist women in the workforce. In the face of acute wartime labor shortages, women were needed in the defense industries, the.. The image is widely seen as a symbol of women's empowerment and a sign of major gender transformations that occurred during the 1940s. In their article, "Visual Rhetoric Representing Rosie the Riveter: Myth and Misconception in J. Howard Miller's 'We Can Do It!'. Poster," James Kimble and Lester Olson argue that our current.

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World War II Posters at the Still Picture Branch. September 22, 2020 by Sarah Bseirani, posted in Posters, World War II. "We Can Do It!" 179-WP-1563, NAID: 535413. Many recognize Rosie the Riveter's "We Can Do It!" or Uncle Sam's "I Want You" posters from World War II. Just as the posters created a rousing call to the public at.. J. Howard Miller, Artist Who Created the 'We Can Do It' Poster. In his most recent research, Kimble set his sights on setting the record straight on the poster's creator, J. Howard Miller. In "Famous but Unknown: An Introduction to J. Howard Miller," published by the University of Chicago's Source: Notes in the History of Art, Kimble notes: