The Cold War on MSN
How the USSR used posters to control a population
Soviet propaganda posters were designed to reach a largely illiterate population and deliver ideological messages instantly.
In this excellent new PEACOCK series all the best parts of 1970s style are front and center, backed up by impressive ...
The Opinion columnist M. Gessen examines how the president governs through spectacle, and the message his displays of force ...
As funding cuts threaten Pilsen’s murals and war destroys Ukrainian mosaics, two communities are learning what makes public art endure.
President Trump's pressure campaign against Venezuela is the latest in a long saga of U.S. intervention in the region that is ...
The Soviet Union is unsurpassed in the art of defense budgetry. The point of the game is not so much to lay out actual fiscal allocations as to demonstrate to outsiders the latest Kremlin ...
Phil Edwards on MSN
How Chinese Propaganda Got So Weird
China's “space baby” propaganda posters merge Cold War space race imagery with traditional Chinese mythology and Mao-era ...
The New York Post wasted no time jeering at New York City’s new mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani by touting a front page mock-up of a Soviet-era propaganda poster rebranding the city: “The Red Apple.” ...
Roland Sejko’s doc “A State Film,” culled from a vast archive of official footage made under the regime of Albanian strongman Enver Hoxha, is a fascinating study in the power of image and myth.
Soviet propaganda was more than just posters of smiling workers and strong leaders, it was a psychological tool designed to grow a profound sense of paranoia. From anti-religious posters to haunting ...
A timeline of Stalin's life, the man that oversaw the war machine that helped defeat Nazism and who was the supreme ruler of ...
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