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Lunney Lecture

  • Lunney Museum 211 W. South 1st St Seneca, SC, 29678 United States (map)

The first lecture of 2023 in the Lunney Lecture series. The Lunney Lectures explore various topics related to art, history, and culture. Come back to learn more about this date and future lectures in the series.

Lecture Topic:

Becoming Rosie:

The Unlikely Story of Helaine Victoria Press and the “We Can Do It” Poster

The now-iconic image of the woman with the flexed bicep and polka-dot bandana didn’t become “Rosie the Riveter” until 1986, when two women printing postcards out of an Indiana garage named it and associated it with feminism for the first time. The true history of the “We Can Do It” image is far from the popular narrative of Rosie as a government recruitment poster that empowered women to take on war work. During WWII, the poster would only have been seen by Westinghouse employees over two weeks in February 1943—it was not widely circulated until it was unearthed from an archive in the late 1970s and early 1980s. Here, I examine this image’s transformation from obscure wartime propaganda to international feminist icon, focusing on the untold story of the rural feminist press that helped “We Can Do It” become Rosie

 

Presenter Bio:

Michelle C. Smith is an Associate Professor of English at Clemson University, where she teaches undergraduate courses in writing, rhetoric, and literature and graduate courses in rhetoric and composition. Her publications include Utopian Genderscapes (2021), a book-length study of rhetorics of women’s work in nineteenth-century utopian communities, as well as journal articles and book chapters on assorted topics in feminist rhetorics, research methods, and rhetorical theory. Her current project explores archives and feminist memory by tracing the unlikely trajectory of the WWII-era image popularly known as Rosie the Riveter.

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Photography Workshop - Cyanotype

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March 18

Community Engagement Juneteenth Planning Meeting