Weekly news report 197 eastern (1 resultados)
Más imágenesIdioma: Inglés
Editorial: (Director of War Publicity, National War Front), (Victory House, Madras) 1942
- Mapa
Librería: Dendera, London, Reino UnidoDendera
Contactar con el vendedorVendedor de 5 estrellasCondición: Usado - Aceptable
EUR 418,43
Envío por EUR 29,02Se envía de Reino Unido a Estados Unidos de AmericaCantidad disponible: 1 disponibles
No Binding. Condición: Good. Rare British Indian b/w propaganda map 68x44cm, printed on economy paper. Good only, folded with creasing and closed tears. This was 2 hole punched for filing whilst folded, so the holes puncture the map in 10 places. "WNR" identifies this as part of a series of maps produced to accompany the World N…ews Report issued by the Director of War Publicity, National War Front. Undated, c1942. It covers the area bounded by Gallipoli (NW), Telav (NE), Basra (SE), Alexandria and Cairo (SW), with no scale stated. Features include international boundaries, major settlements and connecting routes. This poster supported the British Indian Government's comprehensive propaganda operation to keep the population onside. With India providing over 2 million troops and several million others to the war effort at home, it tied the war to the fate of India, praised Indian contributions, and countered Axis propaganda. It began in 1940 with Provincial and District War Committees coordinated from Calcutta, and continued with the National War Front (NWF) from 1942, under the Director of War Publicity at Victory House in Madras. The NWF operated through Directors at Presidency level supported by District and Divisional organisers, and an array of lecturers, propagandists, village leaders, and inspectors reaching deep into the grassroots. In support, Victory House published the weekly "Madras War Review", and served as a Central Information Bureau with a Showroom displaying its models for railway cars, charts, maps, posters, and other material, which were replicated in local NWF "Victory Houses" across India. Very few of these materials survive. This one is not recorded on Worldcat or Library Hub. (References: Tamil Digital Library; P. Priya, "Popular Distress and the Second World War: Malabar, 1939-45, Proceedings of the Indian History Congress, Vol. 74 (2013), pp. 602-610).