Marking Time: Women and Nazi Propaganda Art during World War II

Authors

  • Barbara McCloskey

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5195/contemp.2012.43

Abstract

"Marking Time" considers the relative scarcity of woman's image in Nazi propaganda posters during World War II. This scarcity departs from the ubiquity of women in paintings and sculptures of the same period. In the fine arts, woman served to solidify the "Nazi myth" and its claim to the timeless time of an Aryan order simultaneously achieved and yet to come. Looking at poster art and using Ernst Bloch's notion of the nonsynchronous, this essay explores the extent to which women as signifiers of the modern – and thus as markers of time – threatened to expose the limits of this Nazi myth especially as the regime's war effort ground to its catastrophic end.

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Published

2012-07-11

How to Cite

McCloskey, B. (2012). Marking Time: Women and Nazi Propaganda Art during World War II. Contemporaneity: Historical Presence in Visual Culture, 2, 1–17. https://doi.org/10.5195/contemp.2012.43

Issue

Section

Articles