Pređi na sadržaj

Датотека:Womans-Holy-War.jpg

Sadržaj stranice nije podržan na drugim jezicima
Ovo je datoteka sa Vikimedijine ostave
S Vikipedije, slobodne enciklopedije

Originalna datoteka(1.032 × 1.536 piksela, veličina datoteke: 403 kB, MIME tip: image/jpeg)

Opis izmene

Opis

"Woman's Holy War. Grand Charge on the Enemy's Works."

An allegorical 1874 political cartoon print, which somewhat unusually shows temperance campaigners (alcohol prohibition advocates) as virtuous armored women warriors (riding sidesaddle), wielding axes Carrie-Nation-style to destroy barrels of Beer, Whisky, Gin, Rum, Brandy, Wine and Liquors, under the banners of "In the name of God and humanity" and "Temperance League". The foremost woman bears the shield seen in the Seal of the United States (based on the U.S. flag), suggesting the patriotic motivations of temperance campaigners. The shoe and pants-leg of a fleeing male miscreant are seen at lower right.

The background to this is that much drinking went on in male-only gathering places in 1874, and working-class men too often went straight from the factory gates to the saloon on pay-days, and drank away much of the money that their families needed to survive. Much wife-beating and abusive parenting was done when husbands were drunk. Even many well-off middle-class and upper-class wives (who were not victims of spousal abuse, and whose economic situation was not threatened by their husbands' drinking) felt somewhat resentful and neglected when their husbands spent too many nights out at all-male convivial events (almost invariably involving drinking). Many women saw alcohol prohibition as a highly-desirable social reform which would ameliorate many of these problems -- and women banding together to take collective action relieved the sense of personal helplessness that women often felt about their individual situations.

For the opposing point of view (expressed by relatively recent immigrants who had a more family-oriented drinking culture, and saw attempts at prohibition as biased immigrant-bashing), see Image:WeinWeibUGesang.jpg.

For another image which criticizes women "temperance crusaders" for neglecting their homes and families, see File:Mother's Gone Crusading (Boston Public Library).jpg...
Datum
Izvor

Edit of image downloaded from Library of Congress site. https://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/2003656595/

http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/cph.3a04601
Autor
Currier and Ives    wikidata:Q1144898
 
Druga imena
Currier & Ives
Opis američki
 printmaking firm founded by Nathaniel Currier (1813–1888) and James Merritt Ives (1824–1895).
Mesto rada
Normativna kontrola
creator QS:P170,Q1144898
Ostale verzije


Licenciranje

Public domain
Public domain
Ова мултимедијална датотека је у јавном власништву у Сједињеним Државама. Ово важи за радове америчких аутора где је истекло ауторско право, углавном због тога што је објављена пре 1. јануара 1929. За више информација погледајте ову страницу.

United States
United States
Ова слика можда није у јавном власништу ван Сједињених Држава; ово нарочито важи за државе које не примењују правило краћег рока за америчке радове, као што су Канада, Кина (не Хонгконг и Макао), Немачка, Мексико и Швајцарска. Обавезно морате навести име аутора и годину објављивања. За више информација погледајте Википедија:Јавно власништво и Википедија:Ауторско право.

Natpisi

Dodajte objašnjenje u jednom redu o tome šta ova datoteka predstavlja

Stavke prikazane u ovoj datoteci

prikazuje

Istorija datoteke

Kliknite na datum/vreme da biste videli tadašnju verziju datoteke.

Datum/vremeMinijaturaDimenzijeKorisnikKomentar
trenutna21:37, 31. jul 2006.Minijatura za verziju na dan 21:37, 31. jul 2006.1.032 × 1.536 (403 kB)AnonMoos"Woman's Holy War. Grand Charge on the Enemy's Works." An allegorical 1874 political cartoon, which somewhat unusually shows temperance campaigners (alcohol prohibition advocates) as virtuous armored women warriors, wielding axes Carrie-Nation-style to

Sledeća stranica koristi ovu datoteku:

Globalna upotreba datoteke

Drugi vikiji koji koriste ovu datoteku:

Metapodaci