Anti Israel Poster "Palestinian National Liberation Movement" Vintage Poster 1983
1 × $2,500.00
Anti Israel Poster "A Continuous Struggle" Vintage Poster Palestinian Popular Struggle Front (PPSF) 1982
1 × $2,200.00
Vintage Tin sign "Nabob" Locks 1945 Palestine
1 × $900.00
Anti Israel Poster The Generation of Land Day 1980 PLO Unified Information
1 × $1,700.00
May 15 Day Palestine Vintage Poster
1 × $900.00
Vintage Israeli Sign "Styptic" Oil Stove Patent Israel 1940s
1 × $650.00
"To The School" Vintage Israeli Educational Poster Israel 1950s
1 × $750.00
Ervinka Vintage Israeli Movie Poster Israel 1967
1 × $1,900.00
"Seven Beauties" Vintage Movie Poster - Israeli Version 1975 film
1 × $750.00
022nd Israeli Independence Day Vintage Poster Israel 1970
1 × $2,800.00
Hapoel Games & Convention Vintage Israeli Poster 1971
1 × $450.00
"Lipstick" Vintage Movie Poster - Israeli Version 1976 film
1 × $750.00
RARE First Israeli Independence Day Blessing Poster, 1949 Shamir Brothers
1 × $3,400.00 $0.00
SOLD
These were published by the most consistent weekly anti-Dreyfus publication. A weekly journal created specifically as a rallying point against the Alfred Dreyfus Affair. Psst! contains no text, only illustrations and captions from the pens of Forain and Caran Ache, principal French caricaturists of their day.
The Dreyfus Affair was an explosive, pivotal moment in the history of France Third Republic. For all of her liberte, egalite, fraternite, France was revealed to be rife with the same unfounded bigotry towards Jews as other less enlightened nations. Opposing camps of Dreyfusards and anti-Dreyfusards settled in as the long political ordeal raged through, not only, French courtrooms, kitchens and marketplaces but the drawing rooms of the outside world as well. This public interest in the Dreyfus conflagration was a 19th century equivalent to the O.J. Trial! Everyone had an opinion. Psst! represented the stiletto sharp but badly misled reiteration of Dreyfus guilt. This magazine unswerving aim was clearly based on preserving the respect and power of the French army and not in establishing who really passed military secrets to the German attache. Widely read during its brief life Psst…! even provoked the creation of another weekly magazine Le Sifflet which sought to maintain Dreyfus innocence. This is propaganda distilled to its purest form, directed at the emotions, without words to complicate the reader’s mental clarity. It was this type of literature and its compelling anti-Semitic position which prompted Theodor Herzl’s call for a Jewish Homeland, as well as Emile Zola famous burst of intellectual outrage.
| Artist / Creator | |
|---|---|
| Technique | |
| Year | 1899 |
| Condition | |
| Size | 40×29 cm ~ 16×11 inch |
| Quantity | 1 |
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