Answer:
hat the public thought about the war really mattered.
The government needed to recruit lots of soldiers and wanted people to support them.
Posters were printed that made the army look exciting.
Other posters told men it was their duty to join, that they would feel proud if they did and guilty or embarrassed if they didn't join.
A collage of World War One era recruitment posters
What is propaganda?
Propaganda is used to try to make people think a certain way.
Stories about bad things the Germans had done were told to make people angry and frightened so everyone would want Britain to beat them in the war.
But many tales were untrue and Germany told the same stories about Britain.
Which posters were used for propaganda?
This famous poster used the face of Lord Kitchener to persuade men to join the army. Kitchener died when his ship hit a German mine.
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Recruitment poster from World War One showing people from different backgrounds in the war
Recruitment poster from World War One about the sinking of the Lusitania
Recruitment poster from World War One with a solider on the front asking for help
A poster about air raids encouraging men to enlist in the army from World War One
A recruitment poster for the Womens Land Army during World War One
Recruitment poster from World War One with women and children asking men to go to war
Information poster from World War One encouraging people to eat less bread
How did wartime propaganda work?
Posters were very carefully designed with words and images which had a special effect on the viewer.
There are three famous posters below.
Click on the posters to find out how they were used for propaganda.
What were newspapers like during the war?
At first journalists were not allowed to report from the Western Front.
Many found secret ways to travel there. One journalist, Basil Clarke, hid on a train full of French soldiers.
In April 1915 the ban was stopped and some journalists went to the front.
How did propaganda change?
In August 1916, a famous British film was shown in cinemas about the Battle of the Somme.
A few parts of the film were acted but most of it was real.
Around one million people saw the film in the six weeks after it was released.
It was the first time people at home could see soldiers in the trenches, guns firing and wounded men.
Filming and reporting from the Front let people find out what was really happening in the war.
Although it was upsetting, people were glad that they could finally see it.
A French cameraman films a wounded Scottish soldier at the Battle of the Somme in 1916
A French cameraman films a wounded Scottish soldier at the Somme in 1916.
Step-by-step explanation: